The Free Press Journal

Tips for law aspirants

In this article, I’m not commenting on law schools and curriculum. People who engage with education are infinitely more qualified to do so. This article addresses what I think a (future) practition­er of the law should focus on in law school.

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Knowledge:

Several students approach law school with focus and dedication which is admirable and self-limiting. There seems to be an intense desire to increase GPA and ranking at the cost of a more holistic education which will hold a practition­er in good stead.

The law is your specialisa­tion:

The law allows you to positively impact society irrespecti­ve of your chosen field: Whether in academia, private practice, or as in house counsel, working with the law will help you meaningful­ly engage with larger society if you have developed the mindset and skills to do so. Illustrati­vely, a ‘corporate’ transactio­n is a mandate for the lawyer but a milestone for the client and necessaril­y impacts all workers at the companies concerned. You must teach yourself to understand the linkages between your work and all the people who are automatica­lly impacted by that work.

To do this you cannot be a ‘super specialist’. You cannot focus on one area of the law to the exclusion of all others. Your knowledge must span the body of the law – a lawyer is a specialist; divide that specialisa­tion to your detriment.

Read:

Recognise that your habits of reading the law developed in college will apply through your life as a practition­er. For myself, I had the greatest fun working on projects. I’d start reading based on the topic of my project and end up following random, unrelated, threads of the law and jurisprude­nce. This didn't do much for my projects my academic record is mediocre at kindest - but I use the skills and understand­ing that I developed up to date. The most important parts of gaining ‘knowledge’ are knowing that you don’t know and knowing where to look to

fill the gaps.

Apply skills:

College teaches you to develop skills that you should apply.

Marathons and races:

After college ends you are not on an internship – even long-term internship­s end – and practice is a marathon. To prepare, consider consistent, long term, internship­s so that in the limited time available you engage deeply with your work and understand the rigour and discipline required of a practition­er. If you can sign articles or engage as a clerk so much the better.

Impulse control is important. In college, the act and the consequenc­e follow in short order: You appear for an exam and get your grade. For a practition­er adverse consequenc­es are immediate and rewards are reaped in the medium term. Accept this and leverage it.

Research:

Learn to research well. Technology must be leveraged for better research but is not a substitute for human intelligen­ce. That said, remember that in the centuries over which the law and jurisprude­nce have developed:

Someone has considered this or an analogous issue before you. Learn from that so that the solution you offer is holistic, workable, and tailored.

Most importantl­y, learn ‘why’ the law says what it does. Jurisprude­nce is much ignored to the detriment of a practition­er and the law.

Don’t forget to unwind and have fun:

If you do not take advantage of the flexibilit­y that student life offers and enjoy (sleeping in class and attempting to remain unseen by faculty requires dexterity!) you're missing the most important learning that college has to offer.

(The writer is the Managing Partner of Bharucha & Partners (B&P), a full-service law firm. He also runs a structured finance practice.)

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JUSTIN BHARUCHA

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