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  • 标题:Hot Jobs in Law
  • 作者:Anne Austin
  • 期刊名称:Career World
  • 印刷版ISSN:0744-1002
  • 出版年度:2000
  • 卷号:Oct 2000
  • 出版社:Weekly Reader Corporation

Hot Jobs in Law

Anne Austin

From cyberlaw to entrepreneurial law--there are many fast growing fields in law today. Find out which areas might appeal to you.

Do you speak easily to all sorts of people? Do you take pride in using language precisely? Do you think logically, stay on top of details, and manage time well? If so, then you have some of the skills necessary to succeed in the legal world.

Of the more than 600,000 lawyers who practice in the United States today, most focus on either litigation or transactions. A litigator is an advocate for her client in a legal proceeding. She interviews witnesses, reviews documents, writes pleadings and briefs (the official documents that tell the client's story and why the law is on his or her side), and argues in front of the judge and jury. A transactional attorney tries to keep his clients out of court. His role is that of an advisor. He puts together the best deal for his client or writes the best contract to achieve what the client wants.

Lawyers get their start with a bachelor's degree and then attend three years of law school. Usually any undergraduate major is good preparation, so long as you build good communication and critical-thinking skills. After graduating from law school, students must pass the bar exam for the state in which they want to practice law. The majority of new lawyers go to work for private law firms. Some lawyers become "in-house" lawyers--they work in business. Still others will use their legal skills to work as public defenders or to lobby lawmakers.

The Latest Trends

Because the law changes to reflect changes in society, there are always new areas in which to work. Here are the hottest trends affecting lawyers.

Cyberlaw

Three years ago, few law firms had Internet practices; now it's a growing specialty that is taught in at least 75 law schools. Lawyers and legislators are scrambling to understand how traditional law applies to new technology. And law firms are looking for new hires who can add computer experience to their legal practice.

Cyberlaw is a term loosely used to describe the various legal issues posed by new computer-based technology. A major concern is personal privacy. The ability of companies to track your Internet use with "cookies" and then sell the data has prompted a number of lawsuits and a probe by the Federal Trade Commission. (A cookie is an invisible file that can be inserted into your browser to track data, such as your shopping preferences, without you even knowing it is there.)

So, our lawmakers must learn how to apply existing telecommunications laws to apply existing telecommunications laws to the Internet. A recent law legalizes computerized signatures to authenticato important document, such as mortgages--a step that may accelerate business transactions on-line, but raises additional concerns about forgery and fraud.

Computers can also be used for crime. Computers can be used as a tool to misuse, steal, or damage other people's computer information. "Data protection" requires lawyers and law enforcement personnel who understand how technology can be misused. This area of the law is stimulating creation of new laws to prosecute hackers or those who deliberately infect computer programs with viruses.

Entrepreneurial Law

No matter how brilliant entrepreneurs may be, they may know little about the law and how to set up a business. High-tech start-ups need the same legal attention as any other new business, such as how to proceed from formation to an Initial Public Offering or IPO, says attorney John T. Allen. An IPO makes company ownership shares generally available to the public. Start-ups also need to know where to get venture financing--investments made by financially sophisticated investors in private companies.

Allen runs a clinic at the Technology Innovation Center in Evanston, Illinois, and helped establish an entrepreneurial law course at Northwestern University Law School. "What's changed," he says, "is the nature of small businesses today. In the old days, you started at the bottom of the corporate ladder and worked your way up. Now, entrepreneurs bypass corporate structure by starting their own businesses, of which they are the bosses."

Intellectual Property

Copyrights, trademarks, and patents are types of intellectual property--valuable assets created by mental effort. Intellectual property lawyers help their clients establish, protect, and profit from the intellectual property they own. Other people cannot use that property without permission from the owner.

The Recording Industry Association of America and Metallica recently sued Napster, claiming that computer users' ability to download music for free violated the owners' copyrights to the music. Copyright protects the original work of authors, musicians, artists, and others from being copied by persons other than the creator or owner. Courts have established that copyright protection extends to software as well, such as Microsoft Windows.

McDonald's golden arches and the words Coca-Cola are examples of trademarks, distinctive "marks" on goods or services that distinguish them from competitors' products. Patents protect new and original products and processes. To become a patent attorney, a lawyer needs an undergraduate degree in computer science, engineering, or one of the sciences, and must also pass the federal patent bar examination.

The growth of high-tech and Internet-based companies has increased the demand for intellectual property lawyers. The pay can also be outstanding--it was a Silicon Valley law firm that first raised its new associates' salaries to $125,000, the highest in the nation.

Alternative Dispute Resolution

Rather than going to court to resolve their problems, more and more people are turning to alternative dispute resolution (ADR) methods such as mediation and arbitration. Arbitration is often binding on the parties with a court enforcing the decision, whereas mediation is generally nonbinding if the parties choose not to accept a mediator's recommendations on how to resolve their differences. Arbitration clauses often are included in insurance, securities, and employment contracts to settle business-related disputes. Mediation is often used to resolve neighborhood disputes, landlord/tenant problems, family disputes, and consumer/merchant disputes.

While an arbitrator or mediator is not required to be a lawyer, many lawyers now are adding this to their practices.

Paralegals

You don't have to be a lawyer to have a legal career. While paralegals can't give legal advice or represent clients in court, they can perform a variety of tasks under the supervision of an attorney. An additional 84,000 paralegals, also referred to as legal assistants, will be needed by 2008, making it one of the country's fastest growing occupations.

The legal system provides standards for behavior in society. The job of the system is to maintain order and resolve disputes. No matter what career you choose in law, your job makes a difference both to the system and to people's lives.

COPYRIGHT 2000 Weekly Reader Corp.
COPYRIGHT 2001 Gale Group

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