(Why) Is Law School Really For
You?
Before proceeding with your plans to pursue a career
in the legal profession, it is important to ask yourself whether
you really should be, and why you are, leaning toward law school.
In his book entitled "Looking at Law School: A Student
Guide from the Society of American Law Teachers," New
York University Law Professor Stephen Gillers sums up the research
on legal education and legal careers in the U.S.:
"... many law students and law school aspirants partly misconceive
what it means to be a lawyer... Still others may lack a firm concept
of the work" (4-5).
Students tend to learn about what lawyers do from popular culture
(especially movies, television, and fiction) and from pre-law
courses in college; these depictions "emphasize the glamour
and ignore the routine" (5). "Ignored are the uneventful,
daily labors of uncelebrated lawyers pursuing the mundane goals
of anonymous clients with the intellectually unchallenging, often
perfunctory skills with which nearly all lawyers earn a living
most of the time" (6).
The pre-law courses tend to emphasize critical thinking about
hot button issues such as abortion, affirmative action, search
and seizure, euthanasia, etc. However, "the image of lawyer
as critical thinker... is likewise not representative of what
most lawyers do most of the time" (7).
While lawyers generally earn a comfortable living, it is "an
unlikely route to great wealth" (9).
Much of "what lawyers are trained to do for people is help
them protect or acquire property" (13). Those law students
who wish to practice public interest law quickly find out that
"the chance is small that he or she will be able to get a
governmentally or privately funded job that will make it possible
to work for the needy or to confront large issues of social injustice"
(15). Government does not generously fund public defenders of
other public interest law jobs. The clients in public interest
cases are generally impoverished, so they are unable to pay the
living of public interest attorneys. As a result, it is all too
common for law students to enter law school intending to practice
public interest law and leave law school as corporate lawyers.
Corporate law can be exciting, and it can be high-paying, but
it is often neither of the above. See Cameron Stracher's Double
Billing for a well-written portrait of life inside a corporate
law firm. The ethics of strengthening community, health, safety,
environment, and living conditions often take second place to
the ethics of achieving "the client's legal goals to the
best of your ability" (16), even if these goals are defending
your client from polluting San Diego's water source, producing
cars that are unsafe at any speed, or causing severe burns to
nursing home residents because of faulty faucets in bathrooms.
Stracher writes, "As a lawyer, your ultimate obligation is
not necessarily to do justice, bring out the truth, or ensure
fairness" (16).
As Gillers concludes, career choices are very personal (17).
Law is an excellent profession for a wide variety of college graduates.
Whether you're attracted to the stability and prestige, to the
social change opportunities, to the opportunities to prosecute
or defend, to the enjoyment of settling and plea-bargaining, or
for any number of other reasons, the law might very well be for
you. But hordes of 22-year old college-graduates flock to law
schools every year, and substantial percentages of them find out
in hindsight that the legal profession doesn't provide them with
occupational happiness. Surveys of lawyer satisfaction paint a
depressing picture to say the least. The moral of the story: do
your research and learn about what law school is like and what
legal careers are about. Take advantage of legal internships and
externships. Speak with your pre-law advisor. Ask yourself the
tough questions sooner rather than later.