The Wall Street Journal reports this week that even though the US labor market is showing signs of improvement, conditions for older workers continue to deteriorate.
As of last month, the number of unemployed workers ages 55 to 64 has nearly tripled since the recession began. And while it is difficult to quantify just how [...]
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FOR THE WEEK ENDING December 4:
“As we reboot the great American jobs machine, it’s time to shelve outdated assumptions and accept that a portfolio of multiple assignments (i.e., contract work) is what growing legions of companies and executives want. This new relationship between talent and firms isn’t a failure to be stigmatized, but the latest [...]
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Rachel J. Littman, Esq.
How to stand out in a buyer’s market? You can spend a small fortune on job-finding books, but the assistant dean of career development at Pace Law School sums it up for you with 11 simple tips:
1. Be flexible – You may not be able to secure the job of your [...]
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Jill Backer, Esq.
In this brief Q&A, Brooklyn Law School’s associate director of career services, offers some obvious and NOT-so-obvious job-finding suggestions in the roughest job market in a half-century:
Q. What do you see for the legal job market when the economy recovers?
A:I think the legal job market will bounce back, but I doubt it will [...]
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By Daniel Lukasik, Esq.
New York lawyer Daniel Lukasik attended his 30th high school reunion this past summer. It was an occasion that produced this gentle reflection on life, law, and the sweet victory that comes from finally discovering one’s second act:
In a few weeks I’ll turn 48, and have been out of law school for [...]
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Former criminal defense and in-house lawyer Taisha Rucker used to wonder what else she could do with her law degree. Now 13 years later, she’s answered the question, and is working on a book to help law students, new grads, and burned-out lawyers who are just beginning to ask. As part of Rucker’s research, she [...]
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Nearly 10 million people are collecting unemployment benefits, up from 2 ½ million two years ago. How many are lawyers? It all depends on what blogs you read. But SOME of those thousands of out-of-work lawyers and new grads should be using this downtime to re-assess their practice … even their career in law. To [...]
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LawyerAvenue Press (publishers of Solo By Choice and What Can You Do With a Law Degree), is accepting book proposals for 2010. If you have an idea for a nonfiction career book for lawyers and/or new grads, contact Publications Director Mark Jaroslaw. Proposals should include a working title, a synopsis of the work, a description [...]
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Sunday’s New York Times had a terrific article on what is – and is not – appropriate to say when someone close to you becomes a member of the newly unemployed (“Navigating a Delicate Subject: The Layoff of a Friend”). Reporter Alina Tugen writes, “First, hold off on the platitudes. (If) someone has lost their [...]
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This month marks the longest recession since the 1930s , and the worst legal job market in decades. It’s scary out there, but Sheila Nielsen, a Chicago law career consultant and former federal prosecutor, has some suggestions for the newly unemployed. Nielsen spoke at a recent Chicago Bar Association event, and we present a few [...]
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