Happy Labor Day . . . and Speaking of Labor


The Library Staff wishes you all a happy and safe Labor Day.  

In honor of this day celebrating Labor and the work that we all do, here are a few tips as well as some resources available in the library for finding work post-graduation.

Networking:  So often in today’s job market, it’s not about what you know but who you know.  A sad fact, but oftentimes true.  This is why developing relationships with attorneys, judges, and other persons of influence in your chosen area of law during law school can make the job search after law school much easier.  This is not a guarantee, but it does help on many occasions.  

Solo Practice:  If you’re more interested in going solo, that’s also a very viable option.  Remember that as a solo practitioner you will be responsible for all aspects of your firm, which can be a daunting task.  Tackling a solo practice is all about educating yourself.  Check out these resources for more information: Teach Me to Solo; Start Your Own Law Practice: A Guide to All the Things They Don’t Teach in Law School About Starting Your Own Firm; and How to Start & Build A Law Practice.

Non-Attorney Jobs:  It may surprise you to find that some J.D. graduates don’t ever pursue a career as an attorney, but there is a great abundance of alternative careers where your J.D. will come in handy but you don’t need to be an attorney.  For example, a choice close to my heart, a law librarian.  The J.D. helped prepare me and my fellow law librarians to better assist students, practitioners, faculty, and other patrons with their legal research needs.  Because we went through the J.D. program ourselves, we have a better understanding of what exactly our patrons need.  Above the Law provides an interesting article on this here.  Business Insider talks about additional avenues here.  The Library has additional resources on this area including Life After Law and What Can You Do With A Law Degree?

Resume Building:  The Library has many resources with great tips on creating the perfect resume, including Developing A Professional Vita or Resume.  And remember to take advantage of your Career Services department since they have invaluable information and experience to share with you on your job search.

These are just a few ideas to keep on the back burner as you go through law school and think about your career afterwards.  There are always, of course, the big firm practice area or joining a smaller firm.  In fact, these options are often the most sought-after and thought-of choices.  

Regardless of what avenue you pursue, you have the tools to succeed!

Beyond Borders


The main theme of the annual AALL conference in San Antonio this year was “Beyond Borders.”  The conference focused on the numerous limitations placed on law libraries by their patrons, their processes, and their institutions.  Equally emphasized was the focus on how librarians are pushing the limits by using technology to deliver their resources and services to their patrons.  Many librarians feel that their budgets are shrinking and that they are simply not appreciated because patrons are far more fascinated by the internet as their main source of information.

At meetings and workshops throughout the week, it became apparent that the librarians’ concern of becoming irrelevant is unfounded because libraries are continually researching and discovering new methods of remaining relevant.  While it is true that some may close just as the video store and others did, many are fighting and succeeding in carving a niche for themselves just as specialized newspapers like the Wall Street Journal or NYTimes have done.  These organizations are finding ways to not only continue to exist, but to do so profitably.

The question arises, therefore, of how a law library makes itself vital and relevant?  The answer is simple.  In our technologically-advanced world (that barrels forward faster and faster down the road to success), we must become more technologically-savvy and bring the library to the patrons on their home turf, namely through technology.  Some libraries have made good initiatives work in this manner by making their libraries more comfortable places of congregation with multiple amenities that make them more of a community center while other libraries have become the clearinghouse for families and users to exchange ideas and to fulfill their innate need for social interaction.

To truly succeed as a law library in this digital age, however, a law library must become all of these and more.  We, the law librarians, are the guardians of democracy.  The law library is and must continue to be the place where the ordinary person seeks access to information about protecting their rights and learning about their obligations.  Misinformation about these areas abounds on the internet these days.  Who better to filter the grapes, to separate the wheat from the chaff, than the law libraries?

Many librarians have expressed worry and concern that nobody will step up and speak for the libraries.  That nobody will protect us, and that we fill fade from existence.  Some groups may fear being confused by our individual messengers.  They may feel that there are conflicts of interest that they must steer clear of.  They don’t want to bite the hands that feed them.  We can respect that; however, we cannot wait for someone to do it for us.  We must speak up and let everyone know that without law libraries, they are vulnerable to for-profit corporations whose only purpose is to generate value for their shareholders.  It is of the utmost importance that librarians stop worrying and start TAKING CHARGE.  We cannot sit around waiting for someone else to defend the law library.  We must lead the way and come up with open source, free law options that will make the general public clamor for more.  We must not rest as merely the enforcer of overdue fines and food and drink policies.  We must become the source of legal knowledge that people cannot find or understand.  If we do not, they will not miss us until we are gone.  

One particular law library that was discussed at the workshops thought of itself as avaunt guard and ultramodern because they decided to focus solely on digital items and very little on print resources.  When a law library does this, they basically lease the vehicle of information rather than owning it.  When this happens, there are many more strict restrictions, the first sale doctrine does not apply, and fair use is very limited.  Even the ABA is wary of its ability to provide its patrons with the robustness in collection choices and to support the educational purpose of a law school.  This particular library seems very interested in self-preservation and seeks to protect its position as a requirement for accreditation, not as a valuable resource and need.  This library has put itself against the ropes because it is now at the mercy of digital price increases from its vendors.  We must not allow that to happen in other law libraries.  We must create our own content, sources, and software applications.

Many law libraries already strive to accomplish these goals, but we do not have the marketing, the visibility, the funding, and the support that we so desperately need.  We must collaborate with one another rather than following the mistake that many law students make when they compete savagely against one another for top of the class.  By sharing materials that are particularly valuable to our institutions, we can build a network that enriches all cooperating libraries far beyond what any individual library can hope to achieve.  Furthermore, we are not constrained by the licenses imposed by the vendors.  Books are copyrighted, and so are databases, but not libraries.  Our value lies within us.  We are the ones who hold the knowledge.  We must become much more engaged in teaching and writing.  We must become louder and more powerful.

We cannot blame our schools, our government, and our patrons for using our libraries less and less.  They simply are not aware that by doing so they are cutting their own noses and spitting in their own faces.  They simply do not know that once the libraries are all closed or reduced, it will be too late.  We are the corner store, the “mom & pop” shops.  We are sitting back and letting big corporations take our jobs and raise the prices for everyone once the law libraries are gone.  We will have no choice but to pay whatever they ask in order to find a statute or a case, and we will pay even more for a form or a “how to” book.  Let us go on record sounding the warning bell and say that “The sky is falling!  The sky is falling!”

The warning has been proclaimed for a long time now, but we have never been more threatened as an institution than we are now.  This is why we must become more savvy and more available.  We must let everyone know that we are the source, the foundation block of legal knowledge, and that if people want to know the truth about law and legal subjects, no website can ever hope to replace the law library unless it is a digital extension of the law library.

Thursday’s Tome

Amongst the numerous resources we offer here at the library, there is an oft-overlooked section that helps prepare you beyond law school and the Bar Exam.  We spend so much of our time as law students thinking only about surviving all of our classes and making it through the Bar Exam . . . but what happens after that?  Do we start our own firm?  Join the multitude of associate attorneys working for the large, corporate offices?  Throw in all our chips with a few fellow alumni?

At the library we have a plethora of books for career services detailing all aspects of life after law school — how your summer internships can land you a job after graduation; how your relationships are affected by your time in law school; how to start your own law practice.  

Today, I’ll share one such book titled “Start Your Own Law Practice: A guide to all the things they don’t teach in law school about starting your own firm.”  Published in 2005, this title is still relevant almost 10 years later.  Whether you’re a business major from undergrad or completely new to the idea, this book helps outline the steps you need to take with checklists, sample letters and law office forms.  

Here’s the publisher’s synopsis:

“After years of school and maybe even after some years of practice, you are ready to be the boss.
You want to hang out your shingle and open an office of your own.  But running a profitable business takes more than just being a great attorney.  Start Your Own Law Practice provides you with the knowledge to be both a great lawyer and successful business owner.
Whether you are looking to open a sole practitioner’s office or wanting to go into partnership with other colleagues, picking the right location, hiring the right support staff and taking care of all the finances are not easy tasks.  With help from Start Your Own Law Practice, you can be sure you are making the best decisions for success.”

Let us know what your plans are after graduation.  

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