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Law clerk


 

In the United States, a law clerk is a person who assists a judge in researching issues before the court and in writing opinions. The hiring of law clerks is particularly prevalant among federal judges, and state appellate judges. Federal district judges traditionally have two law clerks, who are generally hired for a one-year term, but in some cases are hired for a two-year term. Judges on the United States Court of Appeals are allotted three clerks a piece each year. Associate Justices of the Supreme Court of the United States are entitled to hire four law clerks for each term of the court. The Chief Justice is allowed five law clerks. Interestingly, Chief Justice William Rehnquist never hired more than three clerks per term. Most applicants for clerkship to the Supreme Court have worked previously as clerks for judges on the federal courts of appeals.

Qualifications

Most law clerks are recent law school graduates who were near the top of their class, or who graduated from the most prestigious law schools. Judges often require that applicants for law clerk positions also have experience in law review or moot court.

Related Topics:
Law school - Law review - Moot court

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Because of the selection criteria, many notable legal figures, professors, and judges were law clerks before achieving greatness in other areas of the law.

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Five Supreme Court Justices previously clerked for other Supreme Court Justices. Associate Justice Byron White clerked for Chief Justice Frederick M. Vinson. Chief Justice William Rehnquist clerked for Associate Justice Robert H. Jackson. Associate Justice John Paul Stevens clerked for Associate Justice Wiley Blount Rutledge. Associate Justice Stephen Breyer clerked for Associate Justice Arthur Goldberg and Chief Justice John Roberts clerked for Chief Justice William Rehnquist when Rehnquist was still an Associate Justice.

Related Topics:
Byron White - Frederick M. Vinson - William Rehnquist - Robert H. Jackson - John Paul Stevens - Wiley Blount Rutledge - Stephen Breyer - Arthur Goldberg - John Roberts

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Some judges seek to hire law clerks who not only have excelled academically, but who share the judge's ideological orientation. However, this occurs mostly at the level of some state supreme courts, and the United States Supreme Court. Law clerks can have a great deal of influence on the judges with whom they work. In Brad Meltzer's novel The Tenth Justice, the title character is actually a highly influential Supreme Court law clerk.

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