| Feature |
|
|
Job Opportunities for Civil Rights
Attorneys
Civil rights attorneys follow a calling,
defending the Constitution of the United States in order to make
sure that the rights of their clients are being protected. These
lawyers tend to take on the sorts of cases in which the rights of
individuals have been attacked and need to be defended accordingly.
Civil rights attorney jobs may involve advocating for women's
rights, civil rights, human rights, gay and lesbian rights, voting
rights, first amendment rights, and disability rights, and a lawyer
may also specialize in one form of rights over the others if he or
she so chooses. Becoming a civil rights attorney takes the same
level of education as it does to become most other types of
attorneys, but involves specialized education geared toward rights
laws rather than some other area of law like criminal law. When
specializing in civil rights, an attorney will choose specialized
schooling to make sure that the he or she obtains the right
qualifications. Job duties vary greatly from one civil rights
attorney job to the next, meaning that there are plenty of fields
of study and practice that a civil rights attorney can go
into.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
+ Enlarge
|
|
Civil rights
attorneys follow a calling, defending the Constitution of the
United States in order to make sure that the rights of their
clients are being protected. |
Education Requirements
The process of becoming a civil rights attorney begins with getting
a four-year undergraduate degree from a university. That’s followed
by a three-year education at a law school. During law school, an
aspiring civil rights lawyer will make the decision to take the
courses needed to specialize in constitutional law. After
graduating from law school, the lawyer has to pass the bar exam
before practicing law. Every state has its own bar exam, so be sure
to check for your state's requirements. Many prestigious law firms
are tough to get into because of the competition for admission that
exists, so education is very critical. Some law students find it
hard enough just to get into a prestigious law school these days,
which should speak to the amount of competition that exists within
the legal industry in general.
Job Duties
Depending upon the specialization of a given civil rights attorney,
there are different duties that are required. A lot of the
specializations involve special interest groups. These include gay
and lesbian rights, disability rights, human rights, and women's
rights. Civil rights attorneys fight to ensure that individuals in
these groups are being treated fairly. Other civil rights lawyers,
meanwhile, will focus on just one major issue or amendment, such as
privacy, freedom of expression, the eleventh amendment, voting
rights, and so on. Fundamentally, though, every civil rights
attorney is about ensuring that individuals are treated equally, no
matter what.
Salary
In 2006, the median salary for a civil rights lawyer was $102,470,
with the bulk of salaries in the range between $69,000 and $145,000
per year. Fresh out of college, an average lawyer will earn a
median annual salary of $60,000 within nine months, though some may
earn upwards of $85,000 per year. More experienced lawyers,
meanwhile, will earn significantly more money, although the
salaries vary as much as the employment locations and specialties.
What is important to know is that civil rights attorneys can take
on numerous different jobs in the legal industry, and each will
come with its own unique salary and benefits.
|
|
| Some law students
find it hard enough just to get into a prestigious law school these
days, which should speak to the amount of competition that exists
within the legal industry in general. |
|
Job Opportunities and Outlook
In 2006, there were more than 761,000 lawyers employed in the
practice of law all throughout the country. Of those, 27%,
including numerous civil rights attorneys, were self-employed and
acted either as a partner in a law firm or by flying solo in their
own practice. There is quite a large number of government and
public service positions that are held by civil rights lawyers, but
that being said, civil rights attorneys can find a wide variety of
different jobs to fill that would utilize their skills and
specialties.
In the case when there is not an immediate opening in the civil
rights field, there are many other specialties that one can enter
into until enough experience is accumulated to more easily enter
one's desired specialty. Lawyers fresh out of law school can go
into general practice while looking for a job that matches with
their specialty, and they should generally have no problems
transferring into a specialty civil rights attorney job later
on.
Conclusion
The civil rights attorney is a person who fights for an ideal and
for the rights of the citizens of our country. Working solo or as
part of a law firm, the civil rights attorney is one of a myriad of
specialists within the legal field. There is a lot of competition
for civil rights attorney jobs, but the field is worthwhile to
enter into because it allows for attorneys to fight for the rights
of their clients, regardless of whether they are women's rights,
voting rights, gay and lesbian rights, first amendment rights, or
any of the other rights that we cherish as citizens of this
country. |
|
|
|
Featured
Testimonials
|
|
|
|
I signed up for LawCrossing a couple of months ago and have
obtained a few promising leads.
Mark
|
|
|
|
|
|
Facts
|
|
|
|
LawCrossing Fact #130: Not sure where to start? We’ll show you how
many jobs can use your skills.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Enjoyed reading this article?
Click
here
to sign up for News Wire, our weekly newsletter,
and you'll receive articles just like this right in your
inbox.
|
|
|
|
| Total Legal
Jobs |
| 143,945 |
|
| New Legal Jobs in Last 7
Days |
| 14,807 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| HOW WE WORK |
|
Watch our Latest National TV Commercial!
|
|
|
| WHAT MEMBERS ARE
SAYING |
|
Joann
All of my friends said to check out
LawCrossing.com to find a job and it is just as good as they told
me it was.
|
David
I got a bunch of interviews through
LawCrossing. It is truly a wonderful site and I enjoyed using it
for my job hunt.
|
+
More
success stories
+
Share your success
story with us
|
|
|
|
|
|
| It's fun to see all the legal jobs available in the
market. That's why I use LawCrossing. |
|
|
|
|
|
Tell
Us What You Think
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|