preamble wrote:Oh, I understand that solicitors in Ireland don't make the huge six figure salaries like they do in the Manhattan and Boston big law firms - but I thought the tradeoff would be, while yeah, you wouldn't be making it rain so to speak, but you also don't have any (crushing, crippling) debt; and if lawyers in Ireland on average make enough money to live above the poverty line, I'd be pretty happy. I just want to practice law; not sure exactly what type but I'd probably only consider big law if it was pertinent to me paying down huge loans. I'm not dead set on anything as of right now. The fact that European law firms (or their particular equivalents) are described as much more tranquil than American firms is also a plus.
Harvard Law school published a piece on how in Germany, the "law schools" are all generally on equal footing. Rankings are typically vague and are grouped into categories like "these law schools are great.... and these ones are pretty good too" - but there is no rigid hierarchal categorization of law schools like there is in this country. No clue about Ireland. Similarly, I have no clue about how pedigree based admissions into such programs are. Why, if all the law schools in the land except Yale and Stanford, do not consciously consider undergrad pedigree to an extent that where you went to school would be something actively hurting or helping you (rather than just tip the scale), would Irish legal programs (LLB/BSc or conversion program) seriously consider pedigree of where I went for undergrad? (This is coming off like an attack - it isn't, I'm genuinely curious. I know very little about the economy in Ireland and I'm trying to figure it out.)
As for Ireland being the goal and whatnot - I've always wanted to move to Ireland. I was supposed to move when I was much younger but a bunch of shit happened (illness, death, etc) and we had to stay put. The majority of my family lives in Ireland; the only family I have in the United States is my mother and father actually. I guess those would be my connections. I love Ireland and I feel like I'd be really happy there so long as I was able to find work that catered to my interests at least somewhat and that paid decently. When I talk about to people about moving to Ireland (I don't go into detail about the legal field) they get genuinely confused as to why someone would leave the US for Ireland. They make it sound like I'm leaving the US to live in a shanty in the Congo.
I mentioned early graduation because I thought in this hypothetical situation of having to regroup and restart in Ireland, being younger would be better. I'm currently on a full scholarship that lasts the entire amount of time I need to get my Bachelor's as long as I maintain minimum full credit status (so up to 6 years basically) -- I was planning on dragging out a few semesters for GPA purposes. I know that being way too young will only hurt me in admissions.
Listen, only you know you and what makes you happy but I'd raise the following issues:
1. Do you actually know what it's like to live in Ireland? I feel like a lot of Americans with Irish family/connections have a particular view of the place that is not actually reflected in reality. It's different. More culturally different than, say, moving from NY to Texas. They're outwardly extremely friendly, but a very tough culture to really get under the skin of - so you're really committing yourself to something really serious just in terms of moving location.
2. Your Irish law qualification is completely non-transferable, essentially. Republic of Ireland legal knowledge is helpful in.... the RoI. An american JD is great for working abroad - loads of foreign offices of American firms, etc. Similarly, an English law degree will mean you can work in London and then get transfers abroad to foreign offices of UK firms - perhaps coming back to NY or something. (as long as you are into transactional work). The RoI just doesn't have such a big international corporate presence, and so practitioners of it's legal system are less needed elsewhere. You're likely stuck there for the rest of your working life, unless you leave law.
3. Do you REALLY know you want to do law? It's lots of very, very different things under one big umbrella, and the fact that you don't have a specific interest worries me a little, given that you seem to be making some huge decisions based on the pursuit of it. If courtrooms are what appeals to you, then you need to get qualified where you want to practice because that qualification is never transferable. Ten years of amazing courtroom experience in Ireland means jack squat anywhere else in the world, and the same goes for any other country. However, if you dig corporate law then you can get qualified in the USA and then end up working in Paris if it floats your boat - maybe you go in house for some NGO and work all over the place - whatever. But when you say that 'you just want to practice law' that screams 'I don't know what law is yet.' With all due respect.
4. Yes, prestige matters. Prestige matters everywhere, but to a law firm in Dublin it will mean a heck of a lot to say you graduated from Princeton because a) they've heard of it, and b) they know it means you're smart. If you graduated from UofBumblefuck, Kentucky, what do they have to go on? Not much. You certainly are unlikely to get interest from the top few law firms that will pay you anything remotely approaching the salary you would receive in the USA. Look at these numbers:
http://www.michaelpage.co.uk/salary-survey/legal.htm
In London - the most expensive and best paid city in Europe, probably, and definitely GB, it takes the elite city practice lawyers on average 6 years (+2 in training, so 8 ) to hit 98k. If you'd just stuck around and gone to Law School in your own country you'd be through law school and well on to paying your loans (if you took a sensible package), and with the freedom of dual citizenship you're about to be set for life, especially if you don't care about money.
5. If what you want is the easy life where you get paid middling sums of money for a more tranquil work environment then you need a time machine. The boomer years are gone and they aren't coming back. All law, even in Europe land of the 40 hour work week, is stressful and time consuming. The difference is that in the USA you are outrageously well compensated early on. Yes, you may have debt. But if you are smart, not too much.
TL;DR
Go live in Ireland for a year or something before you commit to being essentially stuck there FOR EVER. Also bury your head deep in some reading about the practice of law and try and imagine yourself doing doc review in Galway (or if court is where you want to be, spending your days defending/prosecuting morons on drunk driving charges.