Establish interest in public interest?
Posted: Thu Oct 27, 2016 9:17 pm
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This point cannot be stressed enough. PD offices, NGOs, etc. want you to have a lot of clinical experience and commitment. A lot of government offices, by contrast, want you to have a few years at a firm under your belt.Mr. Archer wrote:That's public interest but different from other PI jobs like public defense, non-profit, or DA.
This is a good plan.Or should I find some way to volunteer in the 10 months before starting 1L?
I'm not sure how much volunteer work would be open to someone not yet in law school at the sorts of places you mention (or even at PD offices, etc.), so I don't know how helpful it would be. Unless you speak a foreign language - esp. Spanish, but depending on where you are other languages might be equally in demand - and you can help attorneys with intakes/interviews. If you have time to volunteer, I would recommend doing this as it gives you insight into different work environments that will be very helpful as you look around for your 1L summer.spqr351 wrote:A position with the state AG, a city attorney, or small-time, local-office federal agency (IRS, FDA, FCC Etc.)has a lot of appeal to me. In other entries on TLS, the collective wisdom has been that candidates for these positions need to show a sincere track record of public service... how does one establish this? After UG I worked for 18 months in two peon political capacities, and for the last two years as GM at a for-profit government contractor. Is this enough to establish sincere interest? Or should I find some way to volunteer in the 10 months before starting 1L?
Local ties are no problem, as I'm going to LS in the town where I've lived my whole life, minus 4 years at a well-known regional school with a lot of alumni in town.
Agreed. Volunteer for your own edification if you want (though I might take time away from the law while I still can), but, if you go into law school intending to focus on public interest or government jobs, you'll find sufficient opportunities to distinguish yourself on this basis once you're there.Nebby wrote:The collective wisdom concerns what you do during law school. Do government internships and externships during law school. Nothing you can do until you're in law school, imo.
Someone posted the above and then deleted. To be clear, I'll respond:Someone wrote:I feel like three years of substantive work experience post-UG, plus two years of overseas, pre-grad volunteerism is more than enough time and life experience to make a decision about going to law school...zot1 wrote: I strongly recommend you take time off before law school if you can.