David Conwill
Call Me a Cab
- Messages
- 2,854
- Location
- Bennington, VT 05201
Welcome Magistrate Chris! So far it has been a smattering of UK and Commonwealth legal history, wine, and hats, but I was just about to ask a question of the Bar that sort of diverted things a bit.
Technology aside, I would like to hear the Association’s thoughts on how the profession has changed since the Golden Era, and whether it’s for better or worse.
In the United States, we’ve done away with “reading the law” and the bachelor’s degree in law (L.L.B., I think it was), so now every lawyer has a Juris Doctorate. But it strikes me that if anything there is now less prestige to being an attorney than in the ‘30s, ‘40s, and ‘50s; as anyone who can fill out a loan application can get a JD and a bar prep course; law schools crank out far more graduates than there are jobs; and lots of what was once associate work is being farmed out overseas.
My alma mater likes to refer to the flood of graduates as creating better access to justice. So does my state bar for that matter. But I’m not convinced this is really the best thing for society or lawyers, it just seems like a race to the bottom.
Is this accurate, or am I just becoming cynical from reading the comments to ABA Journal articles?
-Dave
Technology aside, I would like to hear the Association’s thoughts on how the profession has changed since the Golden Era, and whether it’s for better or worse.
In the United States, we’ve done away with “reading the law” and the bachelor’s degree in law (L.L.B., I think it was), so now every lawyer has a Juris Doctorate. But it strikes me that if anything there is now less prestige to being an attorney than in the ‘30s, ‘40s, and ‘50s; as anyone who can fill out a loan application can get a JD and a bar prep course; law schools crank out far more graduates than there are jobs; and lots of what was once associate work is being farmed out overseas.
My alma mater likes to refer to the flood of graduates as creating better access to justice. So does my state bar for that matter. But I’m not convinced this is really the best thing for society or lawyers, it just seems like a race to the bottom.
Is this accurate, or am I just becoming cynical from reading the comments to ABA Journal articles?
-Dave