Four Seyfarth Lawyers Selected for 2026 Leadership Council on Legal Diversity

February 19, 2026 – Four Seyfarth Shaw LLP lawyers—Heriberto “Heri” Alvarez Jr. , Yoon-Woo Nam, Gaspar Gonzalez, and Daniel Keum—have been chosen for the 2026 Leadership Council on Legal Diversity (LCLD) Fellows and Pathfinders programs. This marks the first time the firm has had four lawyers recognized in a single year, reflecting their exceptional legal work and emerging leadership in the profession. The LCLD Fellows Program is the organization's flagship talent development initiative, offering high-potential mid-career attorneys a year-long experience focused…

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FTC Continues Commitment to Enforcement Actions to Cease Alleged Unfair Labor-Market Practices

Quick Hits On December 19, 2025, the FTC announced an enforcement action against business-to-business no-poach practices and issued a proposed order that would require building services contractor Adamas Amenity Services LLC and its affiliated businesses (Adamas) to cease enforcement of their anticompetitive no-hire agreements. The order was finalized on February 12, 2026. This latest action, which mirrors two prior enforcement actions of the same type against Planned Building Services and…

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Research identifies a distinct immune signature in treatment-resistant Myasthenia Gravis

Myasthenia Gravis (MG) is a rare autoimmune disease in which the immune system attacks the connection between nerves and muscles. This attack causes muscle weakness that can affect vision, movement, speech, swallowing, and breathing. While many patients respond to treatment, others develop a severe, treatment-resistant form of the condition known as refractory MG. Currently, there are no reliable biomarkers to help doctors predict which patients will respond to therapy and which…

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Our 2026 Sustainability Report

Building resilient, responsible organisations in a changing world Q5’s 2026 Sustainability Report highlights the firm’s progress across people, ethics, resilience, environmental action and social impact. With clear ESG priorities and a focus on long-term organisational health, the report shows how Q5 is evolving to help clients and communities thrive. Download the full report below. Reading time: 2 minutes We are proud to share our 2026 Sustainability Report, which captures how…

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Cross-Border Remote Work and Permanent Establishment: Mitigating Risk for Multinational Employers

Quick Hits The OECD’s November 2025 update to the Model Tax Convention introduces a new two-part framework for assessing permanent establishment (PE) risks from cross-border remote work, including a 50 percent working time safe harbor and a “commercial reason” test. No automatic PE arises from mere employee-driven remote work in another country, providing relief for multinational employers managing hybrid and distributed teams. Employers may want to track working time splits…

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What health organizations need to know about the new AI scribe guidelines in Ontario, British Columbia, and Alberta

Artificial intelligence–powered medical scribe tools (AI scribes) are increasingly used by Canadian health organizations to reduce documentation workload. In response, privacy regulators in Ontario, British Columbia, and Alberta have issued guidance on their lawful use under provincial health-privacy laws. The scope of the new guidance varies by province. In Ontario and Alberta, it applies broadly to health information custodians as defined under PHIPA and the HIA, including hospitals, clinics, and…

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Expert Comment: Should the UK relax clean energy targets?

Dr Stuart Jenkins, Oxford Net Zero Research Fellow Last week an Oxford Net Zero report laid out our views on the future for the global oil and gas sector. Helpfully for stimulating conversation, the next day the Tony Blair Institute (TBI) released their own policy brief discussing the challenges for the current UK energy strategy.TBI’s brief suggests there are missed opportunities for UK oil and gas, which, if unlocked, would…

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Evangelos Oikonomou: Decoding the Hidden Signals of Heart Disease

Howie and Harlan are joined by Evangelos Oikonomou, a cardiologist and data scientist at the Yale School of Medicine, to discuss how AI can extract overlooked signs of heart disease from routine ECGs, imaging studies, and electronic health records—and how to deploy those tools responsibly at scale. Harlan explains whether a widely covered study suggesting that coffee may lower the risk of dementia should change your daily brew; Howie grapples…

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Russia and the Post-Soviet Space: Adaptation or Retention?

On 19 February, Moscow hosted the presentation of the new Valdai report “Russia and Its Neighbours: Mutual Responsibility and Co-Development”. Fyodor Lukyanov, Research Director of the Valdai Club and moderator of the discussion, described the topic of Russia’s relations with neighbouring countries as highly dynamic and multifaceted, adding that it is likely to be the principal question in Russian foreign policy for the coming years. The report’s author, Timofei Bordachev,…

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Manchester to license medical teaching programme to Frederick University in Cyprus

Medical students at Frederick University in Cyprus are to develop their knowledge and expertise to become medical practitioners  using the world renowned undergraduate medical degree programme at The University of Manchester.The landmark licensing agreement was announced at a celebration of the sixtieth anniversary of the Cypriot university this week (18 Feb) in Limassol.The University of Manchester’s School of Medical Sciences programme will be used as a model to develop a…

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Climate-related disasters can push up the cost of debt

19 February 2026By Sofia Anyfantaki, Marianna Blix Grimaldi, Carlos Madeira, Simona Malovana and Georgios PapadopoulosClimate change has become an important factor for fiscal policy, debt sustainability and sovereign risk. This blog post shows how climate shocks can push up bond yields, especially for highly indebted and developing countries.Climate change poses risks to public finances through various channels: adaptation and mitigation measures may demand higher public spending, governments may have to…

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Study shows that digital treatment with Tetris gameplay can dramatically reduce trauma memories

The ground-breaking study, funded by Wellcome, carried out a randomised controlled trial of 99 healthcare workers exposed to trauma at work during the Covid-19 pandemic. The results demonstrate huge potential to implement a highly scalable, low intensity, easily accessible digital treatment that could transform how we prevent and treat PTSD for people who have been exposed to trauma worldwide.The global prevalence of traumaAccording to the World Health Organization, psychological trauma –…

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Disjointed prison health system worsens reoffending rates, think tank finds

The briefing – drawing on research and insights from academics at The University of Manchester– finds that healthcare in prisons is fragmented across the health and justice departments, with responsibility split between multiple agencies and service providers and no single body in charge. Poor coordination between the Department of Health and Social Care, the Ministry of Justice and healthcare providers continues to undermine the quality and continuity of care available to prisoners.This lack of…

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Russia and Its Neighbours: Mutual Responsibility and Co-Development

The military-political conflict between Russia and the West over Ukraine represents a pivotal event in the evolution of relations between Russia and neighbouring countries. The trajectory of its impact is not linear: it is determined by changes taking place in the domestic development of all its participants and by shifts in the broader international context. By the time the special military operation had started, the former Soviet Union’s space had…

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Still No Answers: Seventh Circuit Oral Argument Leaves DEI Questions Unresolved

Quick Hits Despite repeated requests from multiple courts, the administration has yet to articulate what distinguishes lawful DEI programs from those that the federal government believes violate antidiscrimination laws, leaving employers without clear compliance guidance. Federal contractors and money recipients that cannot certify compliance face potential False Claims Act liability, including treble damages, civil investigative demands, and possible criminal exposure—consequences far exceeding traditional antidiscrimination enforcement. The Seventh Circuit panel signaled…

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Fourth Circuit’s Narrow Ruling on Anti-DEI Executive Orders Leaves Employers With Broad Questions

Quick Hits On February 6, 2026, the Fourth Circuit held that the plaintiffs’ facial challenges in National Association of Diversity Officers in Higher Education v. Trump to President Trump’s anti-DEI executive orders (EOs) were unlikely to succeed, but the court did not validate the administration’s enforcement practices, did not endorse its interpretation of anti-discrimination law, and did not define what constitutes “unlawful DEI.” The certification provision in EO 14173 applicable…

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COVID-19 vaccination during pregnancy offers new insight into preeclampsia prevention

A new multinational study from the INTERCOVID Consortium, led by researchers from the University of Oxford, has found that COVID-19 vaccination during pregnancy, particularly when combined with a booster dose, significantly reduces the risk of preeclampsia, a serious and potentially life-threatening pregnancy complication. The findings offer unprecedented insight into preeclampsia prevention, independent of the direct effects of COVID-19 infection. The study, published in eClinicalMedicine, analysed data from 6,527 pregnant women…

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Multi-Vector Policy in Central Asia: Formats and Prospects

The discourse on multi-vector policy in Central Asia is developing as a contemporary version of multipolarity at the macro and micro regional level and is not restricted to the boundaries of the nation-state. It is increasingly ignoring international borders in favour of both a local focus and regional integration. This discourse has tended to explore and categorise the regional commonalities, historical linkages, institutions, policies and economic relations that underpin region-building…

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Ask Not for Whom the Bell Tolls: Haiti TPS Litigation and USCIS I-9 Guidance Signal Broader Employer Risk-and Unanswered Questions

On February 6, 2026, the administration sought emergency relief from the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia’s February 2 order (see here for our prior TPS employer impact update) and filed an appeal with the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit, moving the Haiti Temporary Protected Status (TPS) dispute into the appellate phase. At a February 12 hearing, U.S. District Court Judge Ana Reyes declined from…

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DOL’s Annual Minimum Wage Increase for Certain Federal Contractors Leaves Compliance Uncertainty

Quick Hits Federal contractors must distinguish between contracts entered into before January 30, 2022 (subject to Executive Order (EO) 13658 and DOL’s annual indexed increases), and those entered into on or after that date, which were governed by EO 14026 prior to its revocation. Even though DOL is no longer enforcing EO 14026, contractors remain bound by existing contract clauses unless modified by the contracting officer and must comply with…

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Five CMU Faculty Members Named 2026 Sloan Research Fellows

Five Carnegie Mellon University faculty members from the School of Computer Science(opens in new window), Mellon College of Science(opens in new window) and Dietrich College of Humanities and Social Sciences(opens in new window) are among the 126 recipients of 2026 Sloan Research Fellowships, which honor early career scholars whose achievements put them among the best scientific minds working today.Christopher Eur(opens in new window), an assistant professor in the Department of…

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Existing hospital analysers offer a low-cost method to screen for fake vaccines

The World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that 10.5% of medicines worldwide in low- and middle-income countries are substandard or are falsified (i.e. fake). These medicines and vaccines fail to prevent and treat the diseases for which they are intended and risk additional adverse health consequences if the ingredients used in the falsified products are harmful, resulting in a threat to global health.By repurposing a clinical chemistry analyser to detect and measure…

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Reasonable Accommodation Lessons From the EEOC’s New Telework Guidance

Quick Hits The EEOC issued FAQs to assist federal agencies in implementing President Trump’s return-to-office order in compliance with the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, the federal sector analog to the ADA. As private employers implement return-to-office policies, the EEOC’s FAQs provide useful guidance for managing telework accommodation requests under the ADA. Employers may re-evaluate existing telework arrangements for individual employees and modify or rescind them, depending on the availability and…

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Security in Europe: A Problem Without Solution

Security issues in Europe are undergoing both real-world and conceptual changes. On a real-world level, the region is in the midst of a severe political crisis. Its epicentre is the Ukraine conflict, and its core lies in the contradictions between Russia and NATO countries on a wide range of issues. These real-world factors, in turn, have led to a conceptual crisis of the idea of ​​European security as it had…

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Cal/OSHA Proposes a New ‘Walkaround Rule’

Quick Hits On February 13, 2026, Cal/OSHA issued a notice of proposed rulemaking to implement the “walkaround rule,” which would allow additional employee and employer representatives during inspections. The proposed regulation introduces a framework for involving employer and employee representatives, including third parties, during inspections, raising concerns about potential contentious and adversarial environments. The draft regulation follows the federal OSHA walkaround rule and includes provisions for additional representatives, inspector authority,…

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Remote Work Is Linked to a Decline in Financial Misconduct

Let’s say, for the sake of argument, that you wanted to commit large-scale fraud at your company. Manipulating financial statements or inflating revenue to mislead investors would be difficult to pull off alone. You would likely need others to align stories, suppress dissent, and sustain the deception over time. And your colluders would likely be colleagues whom you’d come to trust after months or years of watercooler chats and after-work…

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Using AI to transform the ECB’s Corporate Telephone Survey

16 February 2025By Maximilian Freier, Alex Melemenidis and Richard Morris Artificial intelligence has the potential to make economic research more effective. But how exactly? This ECB Blog post gives a concrete example. We look at the use of AI to streamline the processes and analytical capabilities of our Corporate Telephone Survey.At the European Central Bank, we use artificial intelligence in our work where appropriate. For example, we use AI to…

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Texas Freezes Filing of New H-1B Petitions by State Agencies and Public Institutions of Higher Education

Quick Hits Governor Abbott has directed Texas public institutions of higher education and state agencies to freeze the initiation or filing of any “new” H-1B petitions for foreign employees until May 31, 2027. Governor Abbott has also directed the impacted state agencies and university institutions to provide H-1B sponsorship data to the Texas Workforce Commission. This directive appears to impact “new” H-1B visas sought by state government agencies and public…

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The AI-Driven Evolution of Robotics

Introduction Robotics and artificial intelligence are converging at an unprecedented pace. As robotics systems increasingly integrate AI-driven decision-making, businesses are unlocking new efficiencies and capabilities across industries from manufacturing and logistics to healthcare and real estate. Yet this convergence introduces complex legal and regulatory challenges. Companies deploying AI-enabled robotics must navigate issues related to data privacy, intellectual property, workplace safety, liability, and compliance with emerging AI governance frameworks. The Shift:…

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Third Circuit Finds Zip Codes May Be Impermissible Proxy for Race in Selective High School Admissions

Quick Hits The Third Circuit explained that challenges to diversity efforts must prove both a discriminatory purpose and impact to trigger strict scrutiny and found sufficient evidence that the district’s policy aimed to alter the racial makeup of its selective high schools. The court emphasized that it is unconstitutional for schools to seek specific racial percentages or racial balancing, and that even race-neutral criteria like zip codes can be scrutinized…

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Harsh Realism and the Limits of Power: Key Takeaways from the 15th Valdai Club Middle East Conference

The first day of the conference continued with the traditional meeting of participants with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, the main part of which was held behind closed doors. The next two sessions were also closed. The second was devoted to conflicts in the region. The tone was set by a participant’s candid admission: with no comprehensive solutions in sight, the most pragmatic approach is simply to minimize damage—curbing destabilizing military actions and prioritizing humanitarian relief. During…

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What the economic impact of Hurricane Katrina means for businesses today

When Hurricane Katrina struck the USA in 2005, nearly 2000 people lost their lives and the cost of the catastrophe exceeded $100 billion. Now, 21 years later, new research from The University of Manchester has found that Katrina left another, less visible legacy long after the storm clouds had cleared.The study, published in the Journal of Corporate Finance, has revealed that in the months and years after Katrina, many businesses…

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Why we need an EU perspective in the supervision of large asset managers

13 February 2026By Ana Maria Ceh, Pierce Daly, Johanne Evrard, Michael Grill, Alessandra Martino, Michael Wedow and Christian Weistroffer Europe’s largest asset managers serve investors across the EU. Yet they remain supervised solely at national level, creating potential blind spots for risks. This calls for a European approach to their supervision, which could also foster cross-border financing.Europe’s asset management industry is booming. Over the past decade, assets under management have…

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Groundbreaking Lawsuit Tests Whether AI Hiring Tools Trigger FCRA Compliance

Quick Hits A proposed class action alleges that a widely-used AI-powered tool violates the federal FCRA and California’s ICRAA by compiling sensitive, individualized personal information on job applicants without their consent.  The complaint contends that by evaluating applicants based on extensive data sources—such as LinkedIn profiles, publications, and job application history—the tool generates consumer reports subject to the disclosure, authorization, notification, and certification requirements of both statutes. The lawsuit could…

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Towards Genuine Multi-Vector Alignment?

Today, however, the management of multi-vector alignment may confront Russia’s neighbours—and, one step further, Russia itself—with new challenges, the need to contain which would be wise to consider in advance. In light of their emergence, two aspects of this issue appear to merit more serious academic and expert attention. First, how will Russia’s neighbours be able to adapt their multi-vector systems of foreign relations in response to new requirements and…

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FTC Finalizes Consent Order Requiring Employer to End Blanket Noncompete Agreements

Quick Hits The FTC negotiated a ten-year consent order with an employer to end the employer’s enforcement of blanket noncompete agreements against nearly 1,800 employees. The consent order mandates that the employer notify employees and former employees that the company’s noncompete agreements are no longer effective, cease enforcement of those agreements, and provide ongoing compliance reporting to the FTC for a decade. The consent order comes after the Trump administration…

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Rebuilding Local News, One Town at a Time

In an era of digital everything, you helped launch a new print newspaper in Belmont, Massachusetts.Fifty weeks a year, we send a print newspaper to every household in town for free. We recently published the 100th issue of the Belmont Voice. We’re a nonprofit; our mission is to inform and connect the community with local news journalism.Rather than doing a subscription model where only those who pay get access, we…

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