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Growing law specialties

Posted: Mon Jan 03, 2011 12:38 am
by mrtoren
As we all know, times are tight and finding a respectable job after graduation is essential. However, I've decided to take the plunge, risk the debt, and pursue a career in law. I'm worried about selecting the right field of law though. I know we should follow our passions, but I would like to balance that with practicality. I want to give myself the opportunity to succeed.

Accordingly, I would like to know which law specialties offer the best employment prospects. Which fields are growing? Which fields are overloaded?

I would also like to know the top schools in each of the growing fields if they are not available on U.S. News & world Report's website.

Thanks guys!

Re: Growing law specialties

Posted: Mon Jan 03, 2011 12:45 am
by let/them/eat/cake
I heard international law is the place to be. You know, globalization and all.

Re: Growing law specialties

Posted: Mon Jan 03, 2011 12:47 am
by Grizz
let/them/eat/cake wrote:I heard international law is the place to be. You know, globalization and all.
OP bro, you're new, so I'll just let you in on it that this is a joke.

Re: Growing law specialties

Posted: Mon Jan 03, 2011 1:08 am
by 2Serious4Numbers
let/them/eat/cake wrote:I heard international law is the place to be. You know, globalization and all.
this is right on point with alternative dispute resolution between emerging markets

Re: Growing law specialties

Posted: Mon Jan 03, 2011 1:18 am
by ksimon2007
2Serious4Numbers wrote:
let/them/eat/cake wrote:I heard international law is the place to be. You know, globalization and all.
this is right on point with alternative dispute resolution between emerging markets
I hope this isn't a joke :?

Re: Growing law specialties

Posted: Mon Jan 03, 2011 1:28 am
by ResolutePear
ksimon2007 wrote:
2Serious4Numbers wrote:
let/them/eat/cake wrote:I heard international law is the place to be. You know, globalization and all.
this is right on point with alternative dispute resolution between emerging markets
I hope this isn't a joke :?
--ImageRemoved--

You heard the man. ALTERNATIVE DISPUTE RESOLUTION!

Re: Growing law specialties

Posted: Mon Jan 03, 2011 1:29 am
by mrtoren
Hahah alright, alright..you all have had your fun. I'm looking for some serious answers though. Would my market help narrow the choices? I'd like to stay around Chicago if possible. Boston would be next choice. After that, its where ever the jobs require me to go.

Re: Growing law specialties

Posted: Mon Jan 03, 2011 1:31 am
by buckilaw
International human rights work is swelling with openings.

Re: Growing law specialties

Posted: Mon Jan 03, 2011 1:35 am
by ResolutePear
Alright-

I think it's well understood that there are more lawyers than legal jobs for lawyers. Therefore, any swelling specialty will still be competitive.

That said, during a recession - it's expected that backruptcy would be popular and in a "boom", real estate will grow. One thing is certain though: taxes. I've talked to several attorneys and they have told me they think tax law is always pretty popular.. the only downside is that a Tax LLM is becoming more common in that field.

Re: Growing law specialties

Posted: Mon Jan 03, 2011 1:38 am
by Grizz
mrtoren wrote:Hahah alright, alright..you all have had your fun. I'm looking for some serious answers though. Would my market help narrow the choices? I'd like to stay around Chicago if possible. Boston would be next choice. After that, its where ever the jobs require me to go.
Have a technical degree? IP is in demand.

Keep in mind:

1. USNWR specialty rankings are meaningless.
2. You probably will not have a chance to specialize much in law school (unless you're talking broadly like crim vs. transactions vs. lit), because you're gonna take a lot of the same classes as lot of other people. Ex. Corporations, Evidence.
3. Big/midsize firm hiring happens before you get a chance to specialize (beginning of 2L).
4. EVERYTHING is competitive now. There are no magic specialties.

Hope that helps.

Re: Growing law specialties

Posted: Mon Jan 03, 2011 9:00 am
by Fred_McGriff
Reality Entertainment Law

Re: Growing law specialties

Posted: Tue Jan 04, 2011 10:52 am
by r6_philly
rad law wrote: Keep in mind:

1. USNWR specialty rankings are meaningless.
Top 3 in IP seem legit!

Re: Growing law specialties

Posted: Tue Jan 04, 2011 11:38 am
by reasonable_man
rad law wrote:
mrtoren wrote:Hahah alright, alright..you all have had your fun. I'm looking for some serious answers though. Would my market help narrow the choices? I'd like to stay around Chicago if possible. Boston would be next choice. After that, its where ever the jobs require me to go.
Have a technical degree? IP is in demand.

Keep in mind:

1. USNWR specialty rankings are meaningless.
2. You probably will not have a chance to specialize much in law school (unless you're talking broadly like crim vs. transactions vs. lit), because you're gonna take a lot of the same classes as lot of other people. Ex. Corporations, Evidence.
3. Big/midsize firm hiring happens before you get a chance to specialize (beginning of 2L).
4. EVERYTHING is competitive now. There are no magic specialties.

Hope that helps.

TITCR ... Also note that your firm choose your specialty for you.

Re: Growing law specialties

Posted: Tue Jan 04, 2011 11:58 am
by johnnyutah
Space Law, Dinosaur Law, and litigation under the Submerged Lands Act of 1953.

Re: Growing law specialties

Posted: Tue Jan 04, 2011 11:59 am
by r6_philly
johnnyutah wrote:Space Law, Dinosaur Law, and litigation under the Submerged Lands Act of 1953.
Privacy litigation. Did you see how much the Lower Merion web spy cam settlement paid?

Re: Growing law specialties

Posted: Tue Jan 04, 2011 12:03 pm
by johnnyutah
r6_philly wrote:
johnnyutah wrote:Space Law, Dinosaur Law, and litigation under the Submerged Lands Act of 1953.
Privacy litigation. Did you see how much the Lower Merion web spy cam settlement paid?
Yep. I still can't believe Lower Merion did that shit. They may as well have set 600 grand on fire; at least they'd have avoided the bad press that way.

Re: Growing law specialties

Posted: Tue Jan 04, 2011 12:19 pm
by SMA22
As a legal recruiter in chicago, I can say that document review on a contract basis is the most in-demand field right now. That's right--$28 an hour doc review, any practice area.

All fields are overloaded right now; I'm seeing new grads, Biglaw layoffs, solo practitioners whose pool of work has dried up, associates from the Chicago suburbs, and former in-house counsel. For new grads it's getting hard to find contract work; a ton of schools feed into Chicago, not just from our city, but from the surrounding states as well. I have candidates who travel from Minnesota to staff document reviews in Chicago. I've seen Northwestern grads and Notre Dame grads right next to the Cooley and John Marshall grads. I assure you that the East Coast is not much better.

If you want to be practical, then I will be honest--I think you should figure out why you want to be a lawyer and what you see yourself doing before you apply. Take an internship, do some research, become a paralegal. If you know where you want to be, you're a lot more likely to get there.

Re: Growing law specialties

Posted: Tue Jan 04, 2011 12:27 pm
by r6_philly
johnnyutah wrote:
r6_philly wrote:
johnnyutah wrote:Space Law, Dinosaur Law, and litigation under the Submerged Lands Act of 1953.
Privacy litigation. Did you see how much the Lower Merion web spy cam settlement paid?
Yep. I still can't believe Lower Merion did that shit. They may as well have set 600 grand on fire; at least they'd have avoided the bad press that way.
They have Kobe!

I am neutral on this one. I wish it went to court.

But it's interesting to see they get 100k and firm get 500k. Those lawyers didn't really know much, I think I'd done a better job. So my future may be bright, these suits will keep coming.

Re: Growing law specialties

Posted: Tue Jan 04, 2011 12:35 pm
by johnnyutah
r6_philly wrote:
johnnyutah wrote:
r6_philly wrote:
johnnyutah wrote:Space Law, Dinosaur Law, and litigation under the Submerged Lands Act of 1953.
Privacy litigation. Did you see how much the Lower Merion web spy cam settlement paid?
Yep. I still can't believe Lower Merion did that shit. They may as well have set 600 grand on fire; at least they'd have avoided the bad press that way.
They have Kobe!

I am neutral on this one. I wish it went to court.

But it's interesting to see they get 100k and firm get 500k. Those lawyers didn't really know much, I think I'd done a better job. So my future may be bright, these suits will keep coming.
I think you're right, and I would've liked to see it go to court, too. My friend and I discussed the legal posture of the case a lot, and we were curious to see how it played out.

And yeah, don't be intimidated by attorneys. Many, many lawyers are terrible at their jobs. At least, that's the impression I've gotten in my limited experience.

Re: Growing law specialties

Posted: Tue Jan 04, 2011 1:28 pm
by johnnyutah
OP: Here's a real answer.

IP, Tax, Bankruptcy and Crimmigration (the way criminal proceedings affect immigration status) are all in high demand right now.

Re: Growing law specialties

Posted: Tue Jan 04, 2011 6:39 pm
by Turtledove
I hear bird law is in high demand. Keep in mind though that it is not governed by reason.