Mayer Brown Launches Firmwide GenAI Training for All 1,800 Lawyers

Published
Score
13

Why it matters

Mayer Brown announced a mandatory generative AI training program for all 1,800 lawyers and business services professionals globally, to be completed throughout 2026. Chair Jon Van Gorp and global chief information officer Evette Pastoriza Clift are leading the initiative, which requires every attorney to complete instruction on responsible AI use, available tools, and practice-area-specific applications. The curriculum emphasizes mandatory human review of all AI outputs, citation verification, and data security protocols, and will deploy multiple platforms including Harvey and Microsoft Copilot.

The firm has not yet disclosed specific details about curriculum structure, completion timelines, or consequences for non-compliance. The training announcement preceded Mayer Brown's AI Summit 2026, scheduled for April 30, and came shortly after the Trump Administration released legislative recommendations for a federal AI framework on March 20, 2026.

Mayer Brown's shift from optional to mandatory AI training signals how major law firms are systematizing AI adoption across entire workforces rather than relying on individual early adopters. The firm's stated focus on "amplifying lawyer capabilities and judgement, not replacing them" reflects industry concern about AI's role in legal services. Attorneys should monitor how peer firms structure similar programs and whether mandatory training becomes standard across the profession, as this may affect hiring, retention, and competitive positioning in legal services.

mail

Get notified about new Artificial Intelligence developments

Primary sources. No fluff. Straight to your inbox.

See more entries tagged Artificial Intelligence.

Also on LawSnap