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I'm sure as a qualified employment attorney, you can seek employment with many different corporations around the world. You may not be able to practice law for the company, but you could work in conjunction with the attorneys they do have on retainer as an in house liaison. Since there are some huge corporations that have companies around the world, you never know where this may take you.

Well, best of luck to you on your journeys.

Take Care

2006-11-01 01:07:38 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

as lawyers i presume you all have degrees. With any degree you can go into virtually any discipline within the business sector. These business sectors have taining programs for those who just graduated.
You can go into certain parts of the public sector but it is limited.I met someone who did 3 years' law for a degree and worked in the tax department of the Inland Revenue in the UK. For jobs overseas, I think you will need to do a job for at least 5 years or so to get specialised. Of course, you can decide to become a tree surgeon which means you will have to travel all over the world but I am not sure if that is the sort of thing you want.
The other jobs overseas involves finance and sales type jobs.

2006-11-01 09:06:57 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I relocated to another state after practicing law a few years, and had a period while I was waiting on my license in the new state. It's not "abroad" but I suppose the same thing applies.

The legal skillset includes interviewing people to get to the heart of the question, learning about situations we knew nothing about when the Client walked in, and drafting documents to explain them to other people who know nothing about them (judges/juries).

I found work as a Technical Writer using those skills.

You also may have developed skills in resolving disputes between parties. You may be able to become an Arbitrator or Negotiator.

What you might do is think of it this way: Since all work involves solving someone else's problems, try to think about what problems you can solve, and try to focus on the ones you actually like to solve.

2006-11-01 09:02:02 · answer #3 · answered by open4one 7 · 0 0

you could probably work in an HR department for a large company

2006-11-01 09:11:15 · answer #4 · answered by bw_r005t3r 2 · 0 0

Would like to know the answer to your question too

2006-11-01 08:59:57 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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