April 2021 Legal Careers Top Blawgs
Before the Bar brings together a diversity of opinions, experiences and voices associated with the law – from students to attorneys and judges to members of the legal education field. Its purpose is to connect law students to the future of law.
Covers legal careers, client service, and marketing.
Covers news and media involving faculty and alumni.
Focuses on career and marketing issues facing associates or partners. By Stephen Seckler.
For attorneys seeking career satisfaction, work/life balance and personal growth.
Covers the qualification process for international lawyers to become English solicitors. By QLTSchool.
Covers career development, client development, and lawyer marketing.
A blawg by Albany Law School Professor Mary Lynch designed to be a useful web-based source of information on current reforms in legal education, and to create a place where people interested in the future of legal education can freely exchange ideas, concerns, and opinions.
Covers how associates should approach the practice of law. By Keith Lee.
Advice, tips and musings regarding law school and life thereafter from a former trial lawyer (and guest bloggers), now Director of Public Service Programs at the North Carolina Central University School of Law in Durham, NC.
From the California Western School of Law.
Edited by William D. Henderson, Jeffrey M. Lipshaw, Michele DeStefano, Andrew Morris and Jerry Organ.
A community of lawyers discussing personal finance, financial independence and investments.
The Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law's student run, real estate law association.
A lawyer turned stay at home mom chronicles life after law firms.
Provides information to attorneys to help them increase career success in the areas of career, marketing, productivity and life balance.
Provides news, career advice, job search strategies, bar association programs and networking events to facilitate a job search. Published by the Tuoror Law Center Career Services Office.
Covers law schools, careers in law and alternative career options for lawyers. By Professor Gregory W. Bowman.