Law in Contemporary Society

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ThoughtsOnCommunity 4 - 10 Feb 2009 - Main.PatrickCronin
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I thought Michael D. made a series of great observations in his entry, "Selflessness is Overrated," under WinningTheLottery. In particular, I thought it might be useful to start a separate thread to further explore the concept of "community" that he introduced:
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I too was struck by Michael's post. I think that this discussion points to some interesting facts about law students as well as the pull that biglaw can exert. Never having been part of a large law firm, I can't speak from experience about whether they have a strong esprit de corps or not. Certainly, from the position of someone outside the biglaw world who may be given the opportunity to enter it, the idea of a community united by power, money, and prestige sounds enticing. However, from a purely statistical point of view, the low retention rate at large law firms makes me think that there is not such a strong sense of community there. Or at least that whatever esprit de corps exists is created by excluding others rather than by forming a real durable bond between the lawyers themselves. In fact, I think that a community based on power and wealth is something of an anti-community - a sense of community that is only felt when considering those who are not in it, but which doesn't spontaneously arise from inside of the organization.

The fact that we are so attracted to an anti-community like biglaw speaks, I think, to a lack of community among law students. I can think of two possible explanations for this lack of community.

(1) Law school attracts people who have never had a very strong sense of community. This is certainly true for me - having been raised in the south by parents who hate where they live, I've never been comfortable being completely part of one community. I've always needed to be in between three or four (musicians, students, non-students, the North, the South, for example). I think I was drawn to law school by the possibility of making a career of mediating between groups.

(2) A function of law school is to separate us from our former communities in order to teach us to exist in the meta-community of "reason" and "logic". A sort of fast-paced republic of letters. I think this function is betrayed by the recommendations of professors and lawyers before we started this year to "not forget the things we liked before we started law school". I, for one, have found this experience to somewhat painful. I think many of us come into class worried whether we are really smart enough to hack it here at this illustrious school which must have illustrious students. I am just getting over being intimidated by the ivy league educations of many of my classmates. Our fear of opening up to one another and thereby proving that we're really not as smart as them can prevent us from forming any real connection with one another. The curve and the lack of interaction between students during class supports this deracinating function.

If I'm right about these two factors contributing to the lack of community in law school, then I don't think that asking ourselves, "where is my community?" is going to solve the problem by itself. For people like me, that question is unanswerable because it seems to assume that I had a community at sometime in the distant past. I think that the real task is for us to work together to create a new community that is not based only on a desire for power. This will require tackling some of the constraints of law school.

I think this wiki is an great tool, because it enables us to make these sort of underground connections. Perhaps we need something similar for other classes or even for our remaining time at law school? Any other ideas?

-- PatrickCronin - 10 Feb 2009

 
 
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Revision 4r4 - 10 Feb 2009 - 22:43:00 - PatrickCronin
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