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Stuart Mitchell

A Simple Guide to Legal Professions - Lawyers and Solicitors - 0 views

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    Many of those who do not work in the legal professions here in the UK often use the terms lawyer and solicitor interchangeably without ever truly understanding the distinction between the two concepts. One might refer to their divorce lawyer and/or their divorce solicitor when describing the same role.
mazyar hedayat

Legal Careers Lose Their Allure, Drop to Dentistry Status | ABA Journal - Law News Now - 0 views

  • Legal Careers Lose Their Allure, Drop to Dentistry Status Posted Jan 7, 2008, 05:52 am CST By Debra Cassens Weiss College grads who want wealth and social status are passing up law and medicine for careers in investment banking. A career at a hedge fund or private equity firm can offer financial rewards that outpace earnings at even the biggest law firms. Partners at the nation’s largest 100 firms made an average of $1.2 million in 2006, but many senior investment bankers will take home an average of $2.25 million to $2.75 million in bonuses and salaries, the New York Times reports. But even more important than money are the glamour, control and quick path to financial rewards in investment banking, according to the article. Lawyers no longer enjoy the prestige they once held, and the quest for billable hours has taken away the notion of law as a noble profession. Doctors and lawyers “have slipped a notch in social status, drifting toward the safe-and-staid realm of dentists and accountants,” the story reports. The change is reflected in the number of students applying to law schools. The number of applicants dropped 5.2 percent in 2005 from the year before, and another 6.7 percent in 2006, when 83,500 applied to law schools.
Eric G. Young

Will Non-Lawyers Soon Be Able To Own U.S. Law Firms? « Cyber-Esq. - 0 views

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    In the US, there is a rule of the legal profession that prohibits non-lawyers from owning law firms. Generally, this rule is based on the rationale that commingling lawyer with lay owners in law firms will result in a lack of adherence to legal ethics designed to protect clients. But is there a logical - or even historical - basis for this prohibition?
mazyar hedayat

km in the legal profession - 0 views

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    from Research and Markest (research reports et al.)
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Eric G. Young

5 Personal Core Competencies For The 21st Century - 0 views

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    Helen Haste, Professor at the Harvard Graduate School of Education, has listed what she calls 5 personal core "competencies" for the 21st century. These are well worth reading and reflecting upon. There is a link to a video of Professor Haste discussing each of these competencies, which I highly recommend that you watch.\n\nWhat do you think of these 5? Do you think there is anything missing? Over-arching these 5, I would add that, as a society, Ii think we need to reach for greater empathy, as was discussed in a recent post here, if not equanimity.
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    It is my firm belief that law schools must begin to teach these types of core competencies, rather than simply focus on "skills-based" pedagogy (e.g., legal research, legal writing skills). To be sure, these skills are important, but they are not core competencies. If law schools do not start teaching these type of core competencies, we will continue to have the same disputes about ethics, professional responsibility, civility, and burn out that currently plague our profession.
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