Thirteenth Annual Informational Career Fair

ATTENTION ALL LAW STUDENTS!

Career choices keeping you up at night?  Get the answers you’ve been looking for at this year’s Informational Career Fair.  Take this opportunity to speak with attorneys practicing in different areas of law about how they got started in their fields and what it’s like to practice law on a day-to-day basis.  The fair will include attorneys working in small, midsize and large firms; public interest organizations; government agencies; the judiciary; and multinational corporations in a variety of practice areas, including antitrust, class action litigation, commercial litigation, corporate, criminal defense, criminal prosecution, entertainment, immigration, in-house, insurance litigation, intellectual property, international, labor and employment, media, public interest law, real estate, securities and tax.

What: Thirteenth Annual Informational Career Fair

When: 12:30-2 p.m., Thursday, March 3, 2011

Where: The Bricks

Why should you attend? You’ll have the opportunity to:

  • meet and network with many attorneys
  • learn firsthand about various practice areas
  • assess your qualifications for and interest in particular practice areas
  • sound like an “insider” when meeting with future potential employers
  • collect written information on different practice areas

For more information on the Career Fair, please contact Cristina Ortega Lopez in the Career Development Office.

2011 Brown Award for $10,000 for Excellence in Writing

2011 BROWN AWARD OF $10,000 FOR EXCELLENCE IN WRITING sponsored by The Judge John R. Brown Scholarship Foundation

The Judge John R. Brown Scholarship Foundation is pleased to announce the eighteenth annual Brown Award to recognize Excellence in Legal Writing in the United States. Any law student currently enrolled in an accredited law school in the United States seeking a J.D. or LL.B degree is eligible to receive the Award.  In order to be considered, four copies of a current legal writing must be submitted to the Foundation with a letter of recommendation by a law school faculty member or legal professional other than the author of the paper.  Only one paper may be sponsored by any faculty member or legal professional, and only one paper may be submitted on behalf of any student. Final judging will be performed by a panel consisting of a law school dean, a federal judge and a law school professor who will be appointed by the Foundation.  This year there is no page limitation or restriction on the topic except that the writing must be on a legal subject.

Award: $10,000
Deadline: May 20, 2011
Learn more by visiting www.brownsims.com/judgebrownaward.htm

LegalArt is Seeking Law Student Volunteers

Seeking Law Student Volunteers

SeminArt: Contracts for Artists

SeminArt: Contracts for Artists

Monday, March 7, 2011 / 6:00 – 7:30pm

LegalArt

1035 N Miami Avenue

Suite 200, Second floor

Miami, FL 33136

Want to get involved with LegalArt? We are seeking two student volunteers for help checking in artists and speaker attendees and event set-up/clean-up.

$10 Suggested Donation online or at the door (FREE for volunteers)

Program Details

Unsure if you need a contract? Unsure what should be in a Contract? This SeminArt is an introduction to basic contracts for artists. Attorneys Carolann Swanson and Johnlee Curtis will outline common types of contracts professional artists use to protect and sustain their careers including gallery, commission, licensing, sale and work for hire. They will discuss the differences and requirements for written and oral contracts and how email correspondence between parties may or may not suffice as a contract. They will also provide information on how to handle contract disputes and what to do when you want to terminate a contract. You will leave the SeminArt with greater knowledge of the steps that should be undertaken to avoid contractual  problems as well as a better understanding of what contracts look like and how they can be more easily understood.

Carolann and Johnlee will be available for specific questions at the end of the program. Stick around to meet other artists and community leaders–LegalArt SeminArts are great networking opportunities!

Please contact LegalLink Coordinator, Jared Kalmanson at legallink@legalartmiami.org with any questions.

On Campus DART Center Informational Session

Careers in Community Organizing for Social Justice Available to UM students and alums!

The Direct Action & Research Training (DART) Center will be hosting an informational session on Monday, March 7 at 5:30 in University Center Room 241 to discuss careers in the field of community organizing with students interested in empowering their communities and working for social change.

Please RSVP if you are interested by contacting Hannah Wittmer via email or calling 785.841.2680 with your name, phone #, email address and year in school.

After years of research into best practices, experimentation, evaluation, and refinement, the Organizers Institute has become THE elite field school in the training of grassroots community organizers in the country.

DART is now accepting applications for the 2011 DART Organizers Institute, the paid, four-month field school for people interested in launching a career in community organizing. Participants will undergo a combined classroom and field training covering such topics as:

* Entering a community
* Identifying and training local leaders
* Strategic planning and issue cutting
* Relationship and community building
* Direct Action on community issues
* Fundraising

The DART Center, has built coalitions throughout the country that have won important victories on a broad set of justice issues including:

* Education reform in low-performing public schools
* Job Training
* Drugs and Violence
* Criminal Recidivism
* Living Wage
* Neighborhood Revitalization
* Predatory Lending
* Affordable Housing, etc.

The DART Organizers Institute combines a 7-day classroom orientation with 15 weeks of infield training at a local grassroots organization and in-field training site.  Organizer Trainees are provided with a cost of living stipend and travel.  Room, board, and tuition will also be paid by DART during the seven-day classroom training.  After successful completion of the program, DART will place graduates into permanent full-time salaried positions earning $30,000-$35,000/year + benefits.  DART is a 501(c)(3) organization, therefore, employees of the DART Network are eligible for Public Service Loan Forgiveness under the recently enacted College Cost Reduction and Access Act.

The 7-day classroom orientation and 15-week infield training start in July 2011. Training locations will include placements in several states around the country.

Although it may be helpful, no direct experience is necessary. Organizer Trainees (OTs) hired to participate in the DART Organizers Institute must demonstrate a desire to pursue community organizing as a long-term professional career. A master’s degree, JD, or similar life experience is preferred though not necessary. Candidates must have a college degree or be graduating prior to July 2011. Also, candidates must display a workmanlike diligence, be driven to produce sustained results, have proven capacity to build relationships of trust, create and execute a plan, act professionally, feel comfortable working with religious institutions, be accountable and willing to hold others accountable, demonstrate disciplined thought and action, and work in a team setting.  OTs must also have access to a car during their training and be flexible regarding relocation. Fluency in Spanish/English is a plus and people of color are encouraged to apply.

To find out more about DART or to apply, we encourage you to contact Hannah Wittmer via email or at (785) 841-2680. You can download applications or view profiles from previous OTs at the DART website: www.thedartcenter.org.

Skadden Fellowship Information Session

Join Susan Butler Plum, Director of The Skadden Fellowship Foundation as she discusses the prestigious post-graduate Skadden Fellowship.

The Skadden Fellowship Foundation was established in 1988 in recognition of the dire need for greater funding for graduating law students who wish to devote their professional lives to providing legal services to the poor (including the working poor), the elderly, the homeless and the disabled, as well as those deprived of their civil or human rights. The aim of the foundation is to give Fellows the freedom to pursue public interest work; thus, the Fellows create their own projects at public interest organizations with at least two lawyers on staff before they apply.

This event will take place on Thursday, March 3rd at 12:30 PM in Law Library Reading Room – D201

If interested in attending, please RSVP to Detra Davis Fleming
.

3Ls and December 2010 Graduates, Are You Interested in a Post-Graduate Fellowship with Legal Corps?

Come join Dean White and current Legal Corps Fellows to learn more about Legal Corps!

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

5:00 p.m. – 6:00 p.m.

Second Floor Reading Room, Law Library, D-201

Dinner Will Be Served

Great Networking Opportunity for Students Interested in Practicing in Ft. Lauderdale/Broward County

The Broward Inns of Court brings together judges, lawyers, law professors and law students who meet regularly to discuss issues involving professionalism for the benefit of the bench and bar. Evening meetings center around dinner and thought provoking contemporary programs suited to increase professionalism and guide the less experienced members. Membership is considered an honor, and is limited in number. The Broward Inns of Court will be conducting meetings on March 15, 2011 and April 13, 2011.  If you are interested in learning more about the Broward Inns of Court or attending future meetings, please contact Sajani Desai of the CDO. Please note the CDO will pay the registration fees for the first four students that contact Ms. Desai.

Exploring Small Firm and Solo Practice

Did you know that the largest entry level law firm market in Florida is the small firm market and that firms of 10 attorneys or less comprise of 73% of Florida Bar membership?

Learn more about small firms and solo practice by joining Monica Elliot, a representative of the Florida Bar Small Firm and Solo Practice Section on Monday, February 28th at 12:3o p.m. in the Student Lounge for a discussion of the benefits of solo and small firm practice.  She will also provide tips on how to best position yourself as a competitive applicant, how to identify and contact employers and how networking can help you with the job search.

Lunch will be provided.  RSVP on Symplicity is suggested but not required.

2011 Patent Law Interview Program – Registration Open

Loyola University Chicago School of Law is hosting the 2011 Patent Law Interview Program on Thursday, July 28 and Friday, July 29 in Chicago, Illinois.  This is a nationwide interview program that targets patent law employers, and rising 2L and 3L students. 

Each year roughly 1,500 law students register for the program, submit their resumes, and bid on interviews with the nation-wide employers that interest them. The program is entirely employer selected – which means that participating employers review the resumes submitted to them and choose the law students they are interested in interviewing at the program.  Roughly half of the students registered for the program are selected for interviews each year.

Students interested in patent law with undergraduate or graduate degrees in engineering or a technical science should consider registering for the program.  You do not need to be patent bar eligible to register, although the vast majority of employers seek patent bar eligible students.

For more information on the program, please refer to the program website at http://www.luc.edu/law/career/patent_students.html.

Online student registration is now open and will close on Monday, March 7.  To register, click on the “Register Now” link on the above web page.  At this stage of registration, you will only need to enter some basic information (you will upload your resume and bid on interviews later in the semester).  Please note that our school is listed alphabetically as “University of Miami School of Law” on the registration form’s drop down menu of law schools. 

We will be paying the $35 registration fee for our students, so you will not be charged anything when you register online.

Please direct any questions about the program to the Patent Program Liaison in the CDO, Karen Warren at kwarren@law.miami.edu.

Smith-Doheny Legal Ethics Writing Competition

Notre Dame Law School announces its 2011 Smith-Doheny Legal Ethics Writing Competition.

Any student currently enrolled at an American or Canadian law school is eligible to apply by submitting a paper on any topic related to legal ethics.  The paper must be original, unpublished work of no more than 50 pages.  Co-authored essays are eligible.  A prize of $2,500 will be awarded to one (1) winner.

The deadline to apply is April 29, 2011 at 5:00 p.m. All papers should be submitted to the following address:

Smith-Doheny Legal Ethics Writing Competition
Notre Dame Law School
P.O. Box 780
Notre Dame, IN 46556
(574) 631-6749
Fax: (574) 631-3980
E-mail: sumption.1@nd.edu