Law in Contemporary Society

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CaseyBoyle-SecondPaper 6 - 14 May 2008 - Main.CaseyBoyle
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The Risk-Averse Lawyer

 
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The Cautious Lawyer and the Risk-Averse Legal Profession

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-- CaseyBoyle - 14 May 2008
 
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-- CaseyBoyle - 05 Apr 2008
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Sometimes I think it was really my risk-averse nature that led me to law school. Not to belittle my own or anyone else’s career goals, but I often speculate that the legal profession attracts a certain “risk-averse” individual, and that many of my law school peers were similarly guided by their own cautious tendencies.
 
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Many lawyers are risk-averse. These lawyers are risk-averse by nature because the legal profession attracts the individual who is, inherently, cautious and risk-averse. They are risk-averse by conditioning because law school and the profession itself promote risk-averseness. The cautious lawyer and the risk-averse legal profession produce an adverse societal effect – they preclude the use of the law as an innovative tool for social change.
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As an undergraduate, I worked in New Haven’s public schools as an elementary school tutor, nutrition program coordinator, and preschool volunteer. From those experiences, my interest in urban education policy was born and, being a native New Yorker and a product of its own city schools, I went on to write my senior essay on mayoral control of the NYC public school system. Since then, I’ve been hooked on education policy. During my senior year, I applied to be a teacher in NYC, hoping to start there and then go on to become NYC Schools Chancellor. At the same time, I’d always considered going to law school. I took the LSAT during my junior year and applied to law school soon after “just in case.” Then when it came to deciding which path I would take, I realize, in retrospect, that I chose the “safe” one. The path without the risk of failure and disappointment, but with the perceived guarantee of high-status and security.
 
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  • These generalizations are false. Some lawyers are risk averse and others aren't. You don't meet many risk loving lawyers in your law school class, and you don't know how to identify them when they pass through the law school to meet you, but that doesn't mean they don't exist. Your initial theme is correct in the subjunctive--were lawyers always risk averse, law would not be effective in making social change undesired by the ruling class. Fortunately, we don't live in the subjunctive.
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Not that teaching is, by any means, a “risky” profession. But the future that I envisioned was far from a sure-fire bet. And in the eyes of family and friends who had watched me “escape” from my middle-class upbringing to go on to Yale, becoming a teacher would be squandering a rare opportunity. If I wanted to be a teacher, they told me, I could have gone to the local community college and saved everyone a lot of money. They reminded me that my older sister and I were the first in my extended family to graduate from college. They spoke of material comfort and status and career satisfaction.
 
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My decision to go to law school wasn’t entirely influenced by the opinions of others. I too felt law school’s allure. Captivated by the perceived guarantee of high-status and eager to continue down a road that would earn me praise, law school seemed the obvious choice. The students I talked to at Admitted Students Day buttressed these beliefs. While many were unsure about their own futures, they were sure of one thing and were prone to repeating it: if you go to a top-tier law school, you get a job in a top-tier firm, regardless of mediocre academic achievement. The formula was flawless. The cautious, self-doubting, and afraid-to-fail person inside me was attracted to it. I tweaked my goals, telling myself that a legal degree would still allow me to pursue my education policy objectives.
 
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Risk-averse by nature

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Law school has seemed to further condition the risk-averse person inside me. Risk-averseness seems to be engrained in the curriculum and culture of law school. The 1L curriculum, one that has changed little over the years, consists of an array of common-law courses. The law is infrequently portrayed as a dynamic tool for social change. Judicial decisions are not analyzed with much attention paid to either context or aftermath. Rules and doctrine seem to be the focus, while policy and innovation are a mere afterthought, discussed after students extract the rules from the cases.
 
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Many individuals who go to law school tend to be, by nature, risk-averse. The legal profession offers a perceived guarantee of high-status and -income, and attracts individuals captivated by the seemingly risk-free path toward that end.
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From my perspective, risk-averseness seems to pervade the law school culture. The custom appears to be that 1Ls blindly follow what the older and wiser 2Ls tell them. If a 2L tells you to “submit your summer associate firm applications by December 1st or else,” you’d better do it. If a 2L tells you to buy the Chemerinsky treatise for Con Law, head to the nearest bookstore before you find yourself with a dreaded B minus. This risk-averseness is evident during exam time. Students who, in September were comforted by the prospect of that guaranteed “B,” now find themselves locked in the library for 15 hour days “just in case.”
 
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At the upper levels of the profession, risk-averseness might be especially pronounced. The prospective lawyers who are accepted to prestigious law schools are those with the most commendable resumes, and have thus grown accustomed to the praise that accompanies high achievement. Once enraptured by such praise, the individual will seek out those endeavors in which he is bound to triumph. The legal profession, with its guarantee of success and good fortune, is a common pick. The formula is oft-repeated by law school administrators and students themselves: if you go to a top-tier law school, you get a job in a top-tier firm. And this does not even require better-than-mediocre academic achievement. Thus, a scenario is created that the cautious, self-doubting, and afraid-to-fail prospective law student relishes and gravitates towards.
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Now, a year later, I find myself at an analogous crossroads. One road leads to an uncertain career and an unpredictable future in public-interest law and education policy or government work. The other leads to the quintessential Big Law Firm, with its seemingly “risk-free” path toward success. Once again, I hear the same voices and feel my risk-averse nature grabbing hold, except this time I feel a stronger urge to ignore them. I recognize the bifurcated pathway that law school and the legal profession have created and enforced – a dichotomy that amounts to a quasi-sorting system. Those willing to engage in the risk-taking and innovative work of pressing for social justice take one road, while those who are more risk-averse and timid head toward Big Law.
 
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  • But, because one wouldn't expect to look to the law firms that serve the business interests of the ruling class for the risk-taking work of pressing for social justice, your analysis actually points away from your conclusion, and towards a proposition with a very different valence. You are providing reason to believe that the ruling class is primarily served and defended by timid lawyers.
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The questions for me then become: how do we uproot this entrenched sorting system? How do we make both paths equally desirable, even to the most risk-averse individuals? Those who head to Big Law do so for a variety of reasons, but, I perceive, not always because they want to. Often, the path is chosen because it appears to be the safest, most attractive option. Those who make this choice often wind up using their license in ways they never intended: to serve the corporate ruling class. Many have big plans and ideas, most of which will never materialize – the combined result of their own risk-averse natures and the dichotomy created by law schools and the legal profession.
 
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Risk-averse by conditioning

The culture of law school and the substance of the legal profession reinforce these risk-averse tendencies. Risk-averseness is engrained in the law school curriculum and in the culture of law school. The 1L curriculum, one that has changed little over the years, consists of an array of common-law courses. Students are not taught how to use the law as a dynamic tool for social change and judicial decisions are analyzed without much attention to either context or to aftermath. Rules and doctrine are the focus. Policy and innovation seem to be afterthoughts, only discussed after students extract the rules from the cases.

Risk-averseness also pervades the law school culture. The custom seems to be that most 1Ls blindly follow what the older and wiser 2Ls tell them. If a 2L tells you to “submit your summer associate firm applications by December 1st or else,” you’d better do it. If a 2L tells you to buy the Chemerinsky treatise for Con Law, head to the nearest bookstore before you find yourself with a dreaded B minus. This risk-averseness is evident during exam time. Students who, in September were comforted by the prospect of that guaranteed “B,” now find themselves locked in the library for 15 hour days “just in case.”

The risk-averseness bred in law school then directs the prospective lawyer into those corners of the profession which offer the perceived guarantee of success and good fortune. Once nestled at their Big Law jobs, many lawyers eschew the prospect of using their license in ways that could uproot the comfy lifestyle that life at the large firm has created for them. At this point, caution is the name of the game and staying put seems to be the path most traveled.

The Social Effect of Risk-Averse Lawyers: How they are hurting society

Lawyers who are cautious by nature and risk-averse by conditioning are afraid to be innovative; few start their own firms or enter non-traditional legal fields. Many law students choose careers in Big Law which offer the prospect of material privilege, instead of pursuing more entrepreneurial, innovative, or public-interest minded careers that lack this guarantee. Many might choose this path because it is tried-and-true, and thus has obvious appeal to the cautious lawyer. In addition, because the culture of law school doesn’t prepare the lawyer for careers other than one in Big Law, the lawyer doesn’t know how to go about using the law in innovative ways. The road of law school seems to lead to only one destination. And to the risk-averse J.D., it is an alluring one.

Once nestled in his high-prestige position, the lawyer is further prevented from using the law in socially innovative ways. Now employed at the “Firm” and working for the “Partner,” the lawyer is cabined into certain practice areas and limited to certain clientele. These lawyers, now well-adapted to the comforts of material success, refuse to put their careers on the line to pursue an avenue that is more innovative and risky. As Veblen writes, the leisure class is marked by social conservatism, a feature that comes to be recognized as a mark of respectability, while innovation comes to be seen as improper, even “vulgar.” (199, 200). He says that because “the exigencies of the general economic situation of the community do not…directly impinge upon” the leisure class, that class becomes the barrier that retards “social evolution.” (198).

Conclusion

The risk-averseness that pervades both legal education and the profession at large creates non-entrepreneurial lawyers who don’t know how to use, or are discouraged from using, the law in innovative, socially-productive ways. The lure of guaranteed material success induces the cautious individual to go to law school. The culture of law school itself conditions the prospective lawyer to choose the most tried-and-true path, one that the cautious law student finds compelling. Once on this path, the lawyer disposes of his ability to use his license in socially innovative and productive ways. This cycle, effectively, reduces the law’s ability to effect dynamic change for the betterment of society.

 
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From where I’m standing now, I recognize the choice I have to make. I recognize that one side reflects a choice that has virtually already been made for me by family, society, the law school institution, and by the risk-averse person inside me. But I also know that there’s another side of me – a side that with the proper social and institutional support and personal courage can prevail.

Revision 6r6 - 14 May 2008 - 22:56:06 - CaseyBoyle
Revision 5r5 - 22 Apr 2008 - 01:47:50 - CaseyBoyle
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