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BSBA in Legal Studies (Pre-Law) |
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The legal
system affects nearly every aspect of our
society, from buying a home to crossing
the street. Lawyers form the backbone of
this vital system, linking it to society
in numerous ways. For that reason, they
hold positions of great responsibility
and are obligated to adhere to a strict
code of ethics.
Lawyers, also called attorneys,
act as both advocates and advisors in our
society. As advocates, they represent one
of the parties in criminal and civil trials
by presenting evidence and arguing in court
to support their client. As advisors, lawyers
counsel their clients concerning their
legal rights and obligations and suggest
particular courses of action in business
and personal matters. Whether acting as
an advocate or an advisor, all attorneys
research the intent of laws and judicial
decisions and apply the law to the specific
circumstances faced by their client. |
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Significant Points |
- Competition for job openings should be keen
because of the large number of students graduating
from law school each year.
- Formal requirements
to become a lawyer generally include a 4-year
college degree, 3 years of law school, and
passing a written bar examination; however,
some requirements may vary by State.
- Competition
for admission to most law schools is intense.
- About 3 out of 4 lawyers practiced privately,
either as partners in law firms or in solo
practices.
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About the Position |
- The more detailed aspects of a lawyer's
job depend upon his or her field of specialization
and position. Although all lawyers are licensed
to represent parties in court, some appear
in court more frequently than others. Trial
lawyers, who specialize in trial work, must
be able to think quickly and speak with ease
and authority. In addition, familiarity with
courtroom rules and strategy is particularly
important in trial work. Still, trial lawyers
spend the majority of their time outside
the courtroom, conducting research, interviewing
clients and witnesses, and handling other
details in preparation for a trial.
- Lawyers
may specialize in a number of areas, such
as bankruptcy, probate, international, or
elder law. Those specializing in environmental
law, for example, may represent interest
groups, waste disposal companies, or construction
firms in their dealings with the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) and other Federal
and State agencies. These lawyers help clients
prepare and file for licenses and applications
for approval before certain activities may
occur. In addition, they represent clients' interests
in administrative adjudications.
- Some lawyers
specialize in the growing field of intellectual
property, helping to protect clients' claims
to copyrights, artwork under contract, product
designs, and computer programs. Still other
lawyers advise insurance companies about
the legality of insurance transactions, guiding
the company in writing insurance policies
to conform with the law and to protect the
companies from unwarranted claims. When claims
are filed against insurance companies, these
attorneys review the claims and represent
the companies in court.
- Most lawyers are in private practice, concentrating
on criminal or civil law. In criminal law,
lawyers represent individuals who have been
charged with crimes and argue their cases
in courts of law. Attorneys dealing with
civil law assist clients with litigation,
wills, trusts, contracts, mortgages, titles,
and leases. Other lawyers handle only public-interest
cases—civil or criminal—which
may have an impact extending well beyond
the individual client.
- Lawyers are sometimes employed full time
by a single client. If the client is a corporation,
the lawyer is known as "house counsel" and
usually advises the company concerning legal
issues related to its business activities.
These issues might involve patents, government
regulations, contracts with other companies,
property interests, or collective bargaining
agreements with unions.
- A significant number of attorneys are employed
at the various levels of government. Lawyers
who work for State attorneys general, prosecutors,
public defenders, and courts play a key role
in the criminal justice system. At the Federal
level, attorneys investigate cases for the
U.S. Department of Justice and other agencies.
Government lawyers also help develop programs,
draft and interpret laws and legislation,
establish enforcement procedures, and argue
civil and criminal cases on behalf of the
government.
- Other lawyers work for legal aid societies—private,
nonprofit organizations established to serve
disadvantaged people. These lawyers generally
handle civil, rather than criminal, cases.
A relatively small number of trained attorneys
work in law schools. Most are faculty members
who specialize in one or more subjects; however,
some serve as administrators. Others work
full time in nonacademic settings and teach
part time.
- Lawyers are increasingly using various
forms of technology to perform their varied
tasks more efficiently. Although all lawyers
continue to use law libraries to prepare cases,
some supplement conventional printed sources
with computer sources, such as the Internet
and legal databases. Software is used to search
this legal literature automatically and to
identify legal texts relevant to a specific
case. In litigation involving many supporting
documents, lawyers may use computers to organize
and index material. Lawyers also utilize
electronic filing, videoconferencing, and
voice-recognition technology to share information
more effectively with other parties involved
in a case.
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Job Outlook |
- Employment of lawyers is expected to grow
about as fast
as average for all occupations through
2014, primarily as a result of growth in
the population and in the general level of
business activities. Job growth among lawyers
also will result from increasing demand for
legal services in such areas as health care,
intellectual property, venture capital, energy,
elder, antitrust, and environmental law.
In addition, the wider availability and affordability
of legal clinics should result in increased
use of legal services by middle-income people.
However, growth in demand for lawyers will
be limited as businesses, in an effort to
reduce costs, increasingly use large accounting
firms and paralegals to perform some of the
same functions that lawyers do. For example,
accounting firms may provide employee-benefit
counseling, process documents, or handle
various other services previously performed
by a law firm. Also, mediation and dispute
resolution increasingly are being used as
alternatives to litigation.
- Competition for
job openings should continue to be keen because
of the large number of students graduating
from law school each year. Graduates with
superior academic records from highly regarded
law schools will have the best job opportunities.
Perhaps as a result of competition for attorney
positions, lawyers are increasingly finding
work in nontraditional areas for which legal
training is an asset, but not normally a
requirement—for
example, administrative, managerial, and
business positions in banks, insurance firms,
real estate companies, government agencies,
and other organizations. Employment opportunities
are expected to continue to arise in these
organizations at a growing rate.
- As in the past, some graduates may have
to accept positions in areas outside of their
field of interest or for which they feel
overqualified. Some recent law school graduates
who have been unable to find permanent positions
are turning to the growing number of temporary
staffing firms that place attorneys in short-term
jobs until they are able to secure full-time
positions. This service allows companies
to hire lawyers on an "as-needed" basis
and permits beginning lawyers to develop
practical skills while looking for permanent
positions.
- Because of the keen competition for
jobs, a law graduate's geographic mobility
and work experience assume greater importance.
The willingness to relocate may be an advantage
in getting a job, but to be licensed in another
State, a lawyer may have to take an additional
State bar examination. In addition, employers
are increasingly seeking graduates who have
advanced law degrees and experience in a
specialty, such as tax, patent, or admiralty
law.
- Employment growth for lawyers will continue
to be concentrated in salaried jobs, as businesses
and all levels of government employ a growing
number of staff attorneys and as employment
in the legal services industry grows. Most
salaried positions are in urban areas where
government agencies, law firms, and big corporations
are concentrated. The number of self-employed
lawyers is expected to decrease slowly, reflecting
the difficulty of establishing a profitable
new practice in the face of competition from
larger, established law firms. Moreover,
the growing complexity of law, which encourages
specialization, along with the cost of maintaining
up-to-date legal research materials, favors
larger firms.
- For lawyers who wish to work independently,
establishing a new practice will probably
be easiest in small towns and expanding suburban
areas. In such communities, competition from
larger, established law firms is likely to
be less keen than in big cities, and new
lawyers may find it easier to become known
to potential clients.
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U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.
(2009). Occupational Outlook Handbook. Retrieved
March 14, 2010 from the U.S. Department of
Labor website at www.bls.gov.

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