Heading Into Public Interest
Alexa Shabecof
Issue date: 9/15/05 Section: News
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These beliefs imbue our work at OPIA with a deep sense of mission. These ideals make it extremely gratifying to work with those of you who will be the public interest leaders of your generation, as well as those of you who will apply your public service ethos to making a difference by doing pro bono work in the private sector. We strive to help you articulate and pursue a professional sense of self that will enable you to achieve a confluence between your professional and personal lives. Most importantly, we hope that we can help you find the kind of work you will find both enjoyable and fulfilling.
We know that some of you have come here with a good idea of what you want to do with your law degree. But, after thousands of conversations with HLS students, we have realized that many of you may have ended up in law school because you lack a strong sense of what you want to do for a living. Having left college without specific training, and knowing that further education is highly valued, you find comfort in a place that will not only give you more time to prepare for the "real world" but will also give you skills that can be applied in numerous settings.
Yet, despite the many doors that a law degree from HLS is supposed to open, many start to see only one option: going into large law firms. There are some reasons that many of you start to narrow your vision of what you can do with a law degree:
* huge debt loads which make you wonder if you can afford to live on anything less than what the big firms pay
* the somewhat more challenging nature of pursuing other paths, including but not limited to the public market
* the pressure of watching your classmates gravitate to big firms
* the added pressure of family or the expectations of others

