Anonymous wrote:Incredibly hard jobs to get and no one is going to hire a 45 year old litigator with zero in-house experience and no real specialty other than being a general litigator.
Your post is completely delusional and shows how little you know about the in-house market, especially in academia.
Anonymous wrote:There are tons of ex-government lawyers, including from Dept of Ed, applying for these jobs right now. Tough time to be looking.
Anonymous wrote:I'm in house and I've litigated against a few universities, including several large and famous institutions in high value matters. I've been continually surprised at their lack of sophistication and inconsistent decision making. It's clear these institutions don't know how to think about legal risk and potential outcomes vs reputation vs legal costs.
I can settle with almost any industry peer on reasonable terms, but universities will opt out of reasonable deals to spend millions on legal fees to walk away with nothing. And the discussions are often all over the place, with the university not knowing what it wants out of the dispute.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Colleges are often horrible places to work. If you don’t have a PhD you may be regarded by the credentialist faculty/staff as a moron - that was my experience, and I found it wearying.
Totally agree!
Anonymous wrote:I'm in house and I've litigated against a few universities, including several large and famous institutions in high value matters. I've been continually surprised at their lack of sophistication and inconsistent decision making. It's clear these institutions don't know how to think about legal risk and potential outcomes vs reputation vs legal costs.
I can settle with almost any industry peer on reasonable terms, but universities will opt out of reasonable deals to spend millions on legal fees to walk away with nothing. And the discussions are often all over the place, with the university not knowing what it wants out of the dispute.
Anonymous wrote:Colleges are often horrible places to work. If you don’t have a PhD you may be regarded by the credentialist faculty/staff as a moron - that was my experience, and I found it wearying.