neo o
it's coming to me...
- Joined
- Aug 16, 2002
- Messages
- 3,294
- Gender
- Male
- HSC
- 2004
I've worked as a solicitor. I've been in legal recruitment. I've been in the APS. Of the people I know from law school, the majority are either back studying or doing something else, even people who managed to get a start in the profession. Of the people who are still in the profession, heaps are jammed up on salaries that people with other degrees would expect to exceed in just a couple of years. I only know 3 people I went to law school with who have successful careers in law.The point is that I'm not saying that it's all sunshine and rainbows for Law students (especially for those who want any role in a law firm). However, Law students probably have it much better than many other students and since most students take it as a combined degree, there's always their other degree.
Yes, Law is absolutely terrible compared to before when it comes to employability. Not saying every law student has a bright future. Legal roles are harder to come by. But Law isn't that terrible if you view it amongst all the degrees out there. Combined Law students have various options, whether it be legal or non-legal.
Like I said before:
If Law is terrible, basically 80% of degrees are terrible.
For the privilege of entering such a competitive profession, you sacrifice two years of potentially earning an income + pay increased HECs fees across the board.
For people who think the sacrifice is worth it for the quality of work - you're going to be disappointed - a lot of people end up doing fairly boring compliance work in quasi legal areas in the public service, or working at suburban and mid-tier law firms effectively just filling out forms and doing routine court work. The hours are awful, and quite often, so are the people you're working with.
I actually get angry when I see later year law students with no industry experience and no idea what they're talking about shilling for law. If you're a school leaver, consider a generalist degree that will give you more career options like a commerce/arts degree, and if you're still keen, you can do a JD down the road. An LLB opens up similar but fewer opportunities than a straight BA.
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