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Almost no serious Australian lawyer works in the Australian office of a US or UK firms; the only exception to that is Bakers (which is for those who are serious, but were pushed out of Mallesons for not being up to scratch).Omnidragon said:Hours 9-8, 5 days a week? Average salary maybe around $45000? That's for local firms. (based on friends doing articles)
Renowned global firms with offices here... hours 9-12am? Average salary low $50k-ish? (based on friends doing articles)
Renowned global firms (like Linklaters) in an overseas office... hours 9-12am? Salary not sure. (only know friends who did seasonals, not articles)
Ok... didn't know that. Lucky I was referring to Bakers only in my mind... b/c that's where the fd worked.El Misterio said:Almost no serious Australian lawyer works in the Australian office of a US or UK firms; the only exception to that is Bakers (which is for those who are serious, but were pushed out of Mallesons for not being up to scratch).
Sure, it'd be great to work for Linklaters in London or Skaddens in New York, but you wouldn't want to work for them here. I doubt that any of them hire graduates here anyway. In any case, working OS is something that law students tend to become irrationally exuberant about. Sure, the money tends to be better (often a very great deal better, but then a great deal of the extra money may be eaten up by the cost of living in London or New York) and the deals are potentially a lot bigger, but an office in London is much like an office in Sydney, except the view probably won't be as good.Omnidragon said:Ok... didn't know that. Lucky I was referring to Bakers only in my mind... b/c that's where the fd worked.
Wouldn't it be pretty good working in, say, Linklaters overseas tho?
Just stating the super obvious. Any tips for us summer clerk obsessed 4th year unsw law students? How did you go with your summer clerkship ? did you get one etc?El Misterio said:Wheredanton: of course it's different, but surely that's only to be expected. I doubt that, for example, studying engineering is much like working as an engineer.
I think it will at least to some degree, otherwise there isn't much point requiring us to have law degrees to work as lawyersapplegate said:Does uni edu prepare well for work as a lawyer?
You didn't emphasiseEl Misterio said:In any case, working OS is something that law students tend to become irrationally exuberant about. Sure, the money tends to be better (often a very great deal better, but then a great deal of the extra money may be eaten up by the cost of living in London or New York) and the deals are potentially a lot bigger,
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