Law Magazines
FBI Careers: The Ultimate Guide to Landing a Job as One of America's Finest, 2nd Edition
Thomas H. Ackerman (Paperback) JIST Works 2005-10
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Answers
Don't get me wrong.. I'm not going to choose my career over how easy it is to get into it
but I just want to know in order, what do I have a better chance of being successful of becoming.
I would LOVE to work in a fashion...
It's hard to get into anything these days, so I would say all three are equal.
Law & Order stars Alana De La Garza and Linus Roach talk about their worst jobs, going to jail, American Idol, and scrabble with TV Guide ...
This video is FAIR USE under US Copyright Law. It is (1)Noncommercial (2)Transformative in nature, and (3)Does not compete with the original work ...
I have started studying LLB LAW 2 years ago. I failed my first year and this year I am repeating my 1st year in a different university, but still don't feel any passion towards the subject, which results in poor attendance and low grades. My ideal...
Although what the other answer said is true - the internet is taking over - journalists are still needed for online journalism. So I believe, if you are passionate, then you should pursue the journalism degree. Ensure that you find a university that might have a focus on online
Law Firm Partner's Self-Serve Checkout Exemplifies Shadow Work Economy
A law firm partner going through a self-service checkout isn’t exactly an unusual sight. But it does offer a lesson in how technology has created a “shadow work” economy.
In an opinion column for the New York Times , Harvard Magazine deputy editor Craig Lambert says he saw the partner scanning purchases the other night. The lawyer likely makes at least $300,000 a year, “yet she was performing the unskilled, entry-level jobs of supermarket checker and bagger free of charge,” Lambert writes.
A 1981 book defined shadow work as unpaid work—including housework—done in a wage-based economy. Lambert believes the advent of technology is increasing the shadow work burden and displacing workers. He offers these examples: Self-service kiosks at airports replace ticket agents. Computer travel websites replace travel agents. Computers allow professionals to do their own typing, making support staff “an antiquarian concept.
12000 Inmates To Be Released Due To New ... - Clutch Magazine

Thousands of inmates who have been incarcerated for possessing small amounts of cocaine will get a taste of freedom soon due to the Crack Cocaine Disparity Law, according to CNN . The law changes the 100-to-1 disparity between minimum sentences for crack and powder cocaine to 18-to-1.
In the old system, people who were caught with 5 grams of cocaine would receive the same sentence as those caught with 500 grams, 5 years of jail time. Now those sentences will be cut in half for convicts busted for small amounts of drugs. Over 12,000 inmates are eligible for early release.
I am really conflicted about this..while in no way I support the sentence disparity, however people forget their are people who reside in communities who have to deal with these people with these “small amounts of cocaine”. It’s great for people who don’t have to live in neighborhoods overran with small time drug dealers and users....
A Long, Hot Summer: Section to Pose New Questions About Law ...
Law schools took a public battering this year amid allegations that they have misled prospective students about just how hard it is for law graduates to find jobs. In the scenario laid out by critics, law schools tout high employment rates without disclosing specifics about the jobs. Some schools even create jobs to bolster their rankings with U.S. News & World Report, leading misinformed law students to take on massive debt in the belief that they will pay it off with a high-paying job in the field.
The ABA was drawn into the controversy when two U.S. senators—Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., and Charles D. Grassley, R-Iowa—joined other critics to demand that the ABA get law schools to provide more transparent information about employment of their graduates.
ABA-accredited law schools are required every year to answer a questionnaire distributed by the Section of Legal Education and Admissions to the Bar. The section—not the entire association—is recognized by the U.S. Department of Education as the national accrediting body for law schools. But the current version of the questionnaire leaves certain gaps in information. Prospective students may learn, for example, the percentage of a law school’s graduates who are employed, but not whether that employment is full- or part-time, or even whether it’s practicing law.
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Law Magazine jobs News
Law Firm Partner's Self-Serve Checkout Exemplifies Shadow Work EconomyABA Journal - Dec 31, 1969
But it does offer a lesson in how technology has created a “shadow work” economy. In an opinion column for the New York Times, Harvard Magazine deputy editor Craig Lambert says he saw the partner scanning purchases the other night.Politico - Dec 31, 1969
2, 2011, and welcome to The Huddle, where we don't charge a monthly fee, we're wondering why we can no longer access the library of Congress' legislative Website (Thomas.loc.gov), People Magazine tells us that actress Zooey Deschanel – star of theScrippsNews - Dec 31, 1969
In May, Berry let the teen return to work with restrictions, such as no cooking over an open flame and no handling of alcohol. Kingsbury was fined $300. Then a local magazine profiled the young chef-in-the-making. In what Kingsbury now acknowledges wasForbes - Dec 31, 1969
I've edited the magazine's Lifestyle section and opinion pieces by the likes of John Bogle and Gordon Bethune. As deputy leadership editor, these days I mostly write about careers and corporate social responsibility. I got my job at through a