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NY v. DC Which is the better place to practice arbitration?
Posted: Wed Jan 06, 2016 12:01 am
by Anonymous User
My understanding is that arbitration is a relatively limited, albeit fast-growing, area of practice, and my goal is to specialize in the area. If there is a difference, which city offers more opportunities for junior associates to actually involve in arbitration cases? Does it in part depend on whether I want to focus on investment arbitration or commercial arbitration (as I assume firms in DC have more governtal resources)? Thanks in advance for any input!
Re: NY v. DC Which is the better place to practice arbitration?
Posted: Wed Jan 06, 2016 12:16 am
by Anonymous User
Hey OP:
I think that if you're set on arbitration, it makes sense to apply to both NY and DC firms. I think Debevoise (who I'd expect you'd apply to) has the practice group centered in NY, but I think some firms have pushed the practice out to DC. Lots of cross-office work anyway, so not certain it matters much.
I'd expect that New York is more frequently a situs.
Re: NY v. DC Which is the better place to practice arbitration?
Posted: Thu Jan 07, 2016 8:42 am
by Anonymous User
Anonymous User wrote:Hey OP:
I think that if you're set on arbitration, it makes sense to apply to both NY and DC firms. I think Debevoise (who I'd expect you'd apply to) has the practice group centered in NY, but I think some firms have pushed the practice out to DC. Lots of cross-office work anyway, so not certain it matters much.
I'd expect that New York is more frequently a situs.
OP here. Thanks for the reply!
I am deciding between a 1L summer job in NY which will let me try some arbitration work and one in DC which is irrelevant to arbitration. I have zero tie in DC before so I would like to work there this summer to build some connections, provided that DC would be a better place to practice arbitration.
Re: NY v. DC Which is the better place to practice arbitration?
Posted: Thu Jan 07, 2016 1:51 pm
by Anonymous User
(Same replied as above)
There's another active arbitration thread where you could ask the opinion of a practitioner in DC.
To my mind, being familiar with arbitration and having touched on the work would be more important, especially as DC is not very concerned about ties.
I think networking opportunities are something to consider, but I'd just take the best paying job you can get. If they both pay the same, quality of work would be what I consider next.
Re: NY v. DC Which is the better place to practice arbitration?
Posted: Thu Jan 07, 2016 2:13 pm
by robotrick
Anonymous User wrote:
OP here. Thanks for the reply!
I am deciding between a 1L summer job in NY which will let me try some arbitration work and one in DC which is irrelevant to arbitration. I have zero tie in DC before so I would like to work there this summer to build some connections, provided that DC would be a better place to practice arbitration.
Take the NY job to try out arbitration before you dedicate your entire career to it. DC doesn't care about ties.
Re: NY v. DC Which is the better place to practice arbitration?
Posted: Thu Jan 07, 2016 2:31 pm
by WheninLaw
robotrick wrote:Anonymous User wrote:
OP here. Thanks for the reply!
I am deciding between a 1L summer job in NY which will let me try some arbitration work and one in DC which is irrelevant to arbitration. I have zero tie in DC before so I would like to work there this summer to build some connections, provided that DC would be a better place to practice arbitration.
Take the NY job to try out arbitration before you dedicate your entire career to it. DC doesn't care about ties.
I don't think this is accurate.
Re: NY v. DC Which is the better place to practice arbitration?
Posted: Thu Jan 07, 2016 10:50 pm
by robotrick
WheninLaw wrote:robotrick wrote:Anonymous User wrote:
OP here. Thanks for the reply!
I am deciding between a 1L summer job in NY which will let me try some arbitration work and one in DC which is irrelevant to arbitration. I have zero tie in DC before so I would like to work there this summer to build some connections, provided that DC would be a better place to practice arbitration.
Take the NY job to try out arbitration before you dedicate your entire career to it. DC doesn't care about ties.
I don't think this is accurate.
Fair enough. OP and others reading might benefit from hearing your opinion/advice on the matter, though.