Download Now
Home Blog Page 1654

Job Opportunity-Senior Legal Associate-Sumati Legal Services

0

Sumati legal services job opportunity.Sumati legal services is hiring for ‘ Senior Legal Associate’ at Chandigarh.Details are as follow:

Job at a glance

  • Designation-Senior Legal Associate
  • Qualification-LLB
  • Salary-not disclosed
  • Experience- 2 to 5 years
  • Location-Chandigarh
  • Keyskills- Strong attention to detail and good analytical and organizational skills.
    Should have excellent command over the English Language both in Written and Oral Communication.
    Should be proficient with computers and computer applications (e.g. Excel, Word, and Power Point).
  • Company name-Sumati legal services
  • Company website-www.sumatilegalservices.in

             company profile

sumati legal services
Sumati Legal Service Private Limited is an integrated IT Enabled Services company focused on the Legal, Compliance & Information Management (LCIM) marketplace. Our services Enable Lawyers to Practice Lawâ„¢ by identifying components of legal business processes that can be OptiSourcedâ„¢ to an offshore location and executing these processes using people, processes and tools/technology specifically designed for business processes that require the balancing of risk, cost and cycle time. Our services include (but are not limited to) Enterprise Contract Management, Intellectual Property Lifecycle Management and Electronic Discovery/Information Governance. We also provide strategy consulting services that support due diligence in LCIM M&A transactions.
How to apply?
Interested candidates can share their CV’s at hr4@sumatilegal.com
Download Now

Job Opportunity-Advocates-Kps Advocates

0

Kps advocates job opportunity.Kps Advocates is hiring for ‘Advocates’ at Delhi.Details are as follow:

Job at a glance

  • Designation-Advocates
  • Qualification-LLB
  • Salary-upto 6 lakh p.a
  • Location-Delhi
  • Experience-0 to 2 years
  • Keyskills-Advocates must have enrolled with Delhi or P&H Bar council.
  • Company name-Kps  Advocates

COMPANY PROFILE

KPS Advocates and Legal Consultants is a multi-practice law firm having its head office at New Delhi, India and branch office in Gurgaon, Haryana. The Firm also have associate offices located across various parts of India including Mumbai, Hyderabad and Bangalore. The Firm consists of a team of experienced, dedicated and dynamic Advocates, Chartered Accountants and other professionals from across various parts of India who have substantial experience in the field of law in which they are engaged. KPS aims at providing highly professional legal services to its clients in a timely manner after following the best ethical practices and keeping a pocket friendly approach for the Client.

How to apply?

Candidates can send their cv’s on [email protected]

KPS Advocates & Legal Consultants

 

Download Now

Job Opportunity-Associates-Trust Legal

0

Trust legal group job opportunity.Trust legal is hiring for ‘associates ‘at Delhi.Details are as follows.

Job at a glance

  • Designation-Associates for Litigation Practice
  • Qualification-LLB
  • Location-Delhi
  • Salary-upto 6 lakh p.a
  • Keyskills-litigation
  • Experience-3 to 5 years in telecommunication,media and technology
  • Company name-Trust Legal
  • Company Website-www.trustlegal.in

company profile

Trust Legal, Advocates & Consultants is a boutique law firm based in New Delhi and has affiliate offices in various cities across the country. Trust Legal is a niche law firm which is solely committed to excellence, hard work and being a leader in its practice areas. Our clients trust us with their most important transactions, disputes and projects because of our ability to cut through complexity and mitigate risks.

Trust Legal has a team of dynamic and energetic lawyers, each one of them being specialized in a particular area of practice. Our lawyers have multidimensional talent and an individual approach to legal practice. Apart from lawyers, Trust Legal also works in close association with other professionals in the capacity of external consultants for Trust Legal. However the team works as a whole and in close coordination with each other, thus enabling one to enrich the other.

How to apply?

Candidates can send their cv’s on [email protected]

Trust Legal

Download Now

Why I Decided To Study Law And My Experience At JGLS (Jindal Global Law School)

0
Why I Decided To Study Law And My Experience At JGLS (Jindal Global Law School)

This article was written by Samarpit Gupta of Jindal Global Law School, Sonepat. If you want to share your law school story, mail it to [email protected]. This article is being republished from A First Taste of Law archives.

Law used to sound like a boring system of the society to me.

I didn’t have much understanding of it, nor did I care about understanding it. All I knew about law was that if I got caught by a traffic policeman, I would have to pay him either over the table or under the table. It was all good till the time I stayed away from it, until the year 2010, when I committed a crime of drinking underage. My father saved me from police that day, they were discussing the ‘dhara’ under which the case was supposed to be filed against me. That was a happy realization period for me which diverted me towards law. I came to realize that the power of the law and from the law is immense and beautiful. I decided it to be my second career option if I don’t get in hotel management.

My dad never wanted me to do hotel management. In fact, he furiously shouted at me once and said that ‘bera banna he kya’ (do you want to be a waiter). Those lines struck me like an arrow, and his words pierced through my heart. Later when I was in my 12th standard, exploring some other career options, when I started reading about the history of India in the British period. Some of the most influential and biggest Indian leaders in the freedom movement were, in fact, lawyers. Then I gave it a thought and came to realize that studying law doesn’t mean that I had to become a lawyer or join the legal profession only. Law will open new horizons for me, it will change my whole perception towards the society and the legal system that runs it. At that moment, I decided to learn more about the law. That was the first time I visited the High Court of Rajasthan, watching lawyers running around from one courtroom to another, tensed clients talking to their lawyers about what his arguments will be against the other party, the temperature was rising (it was summers apparently), clients in the courtroom sitting quietly, ‘there comes the judge, stand up stand up’ everyone mumbling, ‘All Rise’ someone shouted, I saw someone coming out of a door, it was a judge, wearing his shiny black coat, he sat on his chair and then we were allowed to sit. I questioned myself, ‘what is happening around me, is that person sitting behind the files really so powerful?’

The lawyers stood up on the podium, started presenting their arguments and the Judge didn’t pay heed to them and gave them another date, and someone near me mumbled that he is not in good mood today. I went out of the courtroom, thinking about the amount of power vested in a judge. I started googling about powers of the judge and was startled and numb to find that he has a right to take a person’s Right to Live. I laughed at myself and decided to do law, the more I searched and talked about it, the more I learned about the ‘LAW’.

I started searching about the university in which I can get admitted to learning the law. Stumbling upon a various website which rated top universities in India, NLU, NLS, NUJS, they all had a single admission test known as CLAT. I thought about it, I searched more for it, it was winters when the dates and forms were released for CLAT, I was supposed to fill one, didn’t take any kind of coaching and went in to write the exam. There came an OMR sheet, I opened the question booklet, saw the question and laughed at myself. I started playing the game of guess, made some sort of pattern on the answer sheet, slept for 20 minutes during the exam and came out laughing. I knew that this time I’m not leaving my home city and my new girlfriend but yes I am dropping a year to prepare for CLAT and here the actual journey of searching for other law colleges and devoting myself towards the law began.

I joined a tutorial center for CLAT, learned more about other various universities in India which offer courses in law. From somewhere I heard people talking about the most expensive law school in India, I searched for it, had a dinner table conversation about it with my father, he said he will search about it himself, next day when I woke up, he gave me give forms to fill, one of the forms were for Jindal Global Law School.

Here it was, I was already very impressed just by seeing the pictures of this law school, I asked my father about the fees and if he will be able to afford it. He said if it’s in my destiny then, he will surely be able to afford it. I filled up all the forms and forgot about it. The calendar was changing the dates, here comes the day for CLAT, all ambitions to crack it came in, chanting the name of almighty, and I entered the examination hall. Everyone was tensed and were discussing the latest current affairs, few of the people were my classmates, but today they all reacted differently, prior to this exam we discussed about cheating, but they all seemed to ignore me today. I gave it a second thought and started to read the paper and fill up the OMR sheet on which, last year I drew some patterns. This time it was a serious affair. CLAT went good, after that I went for various other examinations. Here comes the day of results. So, CLAT was definitely a big no. I was shattered, was depressed and tensed, after spending a whole year in the tutorial, I had nothing in my hands.

I waited for another result, that was the score for LSAT, ‘BOOM’ I shouted, ‘I cracked it’, next day came to an e-mail from the most awaited O.P. Jindal Global University. Everything was like a movie now, running around the market to buy stuff for college, new clothes, deodorants, hair gels etc. I was delighted, I left my hometown for a never ending journey for JGLS, my heart was beating fast, with my parents, we a took a cab from old Delhi station to Sonepat, finding the way to JGLS, in between the trees, somewhere far I saw a huge flag of our nation. It was Hogwarts, but better. I shouted ‘there it is, my new college’ like a dumb kid.

We reached there in front of a huge metal gate with a board inscribed with O.P. Jindal Global University.

It was such a joyous day, after all the formalities, my parents went back to my hometown. My mother was in a bad mood (for obvious reasons). ‘Stay in touch, take care and study properly’, were the lines while she sat in the car. I was very delighted, meeting so many new people from such diverse background, it was altogether a different experience. Next day we started with orientation and college tour, ‘do I really deserve this place’ a thought came in mind. On the third day of orientation, we met the Vice Chancellor of our university, Prof. C. Raj Kumar, a wonderful personality. The way he spoke was really impressive, it was amazing to be in such a global university. New friends, new life, everything was a treat to my eyes, and you know what I mean.

Days passed by, it was our first semester.

Then came our amazing fresher’s party. Oh that night, it was intense. We celebrated our new college life, getting to know people and much more. Calendar and time changed, few of us started identifying the problems which were there in our college, JGU was a new university, and the very first batch hadn’t graduated yet. We started questioning things on campus, initially we didn’t have a good campus life. The administration got pissed off because of our questions and demand. We didn’t have a student body in place, we started rebelling against each and every action. Soon there were more restrictions and the students of our university were complaining about almost everything.

We found the answer. There was supposed to be student council in place, so we decided to have a proper student body election. The outcomes of pre-election was amazing, the people who never used be bothered about university went on discussing agendas. Yes, we did it – a whole new political culture took birth in JGU. Everyone was up and alive, discussing the future goals and cheap political tactics, while trying to save the semester. People from all batches turned up for electing their president who will be fair with the whole student body.

We had a new president, a vice president, general secretary, cultural secretary and a treasurer, after the student body was formed, I don’t know what happened. Suddenly I could see the winds of change. We were working together as a team, for the betterment of university and its students. In fact, not only we organized an event every semester, we were now having an on campus events and parties every 15 days. From discussing problems like sexual harassment on campus to managing cultural events on campus, everything was dealt perfectly.

In my third year, my colleagues organized the first cultural festival of campus, following it I organized the biggest and craziest electronic dance music festival on campus.

I had no experience of organizing such huge event such as EDM night. It was very new to me, from getting permissions to setting up the stage, everything was in my hands. Obviously, some minor things went wrong during the event, but we managed to throw an amazing event. I had some really supportive seniors to help me out. Be it organizing events to making me understand the twisted laws, everything was explained to me by my seniors.

JGLS, oh my, this college has given me a makeover (I gained a lot of weight apparently) and it actually gave me a new perspective about life, something that we as kids in plus two, in school, never use to even think about.

The culture and its norms used to be everything to us, but after getting in law school such as JGLS, it has broadened my view about almost everything. I never used to think about what important role education plays in a person’s life.

JGLS gave a place where I can identify very vast differences, such as societal difference between India and say Europe, the critical concept of Karl Marx. Some of my seniors drew my attention towards community work and the importance of it, they taught me the class system and why is it so harmful for society.

One of the major problems I faced was littering on the campus.

It was a huge issue for me during the 2nd semester, there were many reasons identified by me and my friend who created the environment protection society of JGLS. The problem persisted in the mentality of people, I noticed that people who were littering around were not well educated about the consequences of littering, I decided to step in and make it a visible issue. I started making sarcastic Youtube videos which made people think about this problem, soon people started to change, everyone started to think about how to make the campus clean and environment friendly, our group procured more than 100 new dustbins. We as part of environment society take it as a huge achievement that we made people think about and reduced littering in a very significant way. That was one of my very first big personal achievement.

JGLS has given me a whole new perspective to think not just about this society I live in but myself too.

During my second semester, I developed a kind of hatred towards this college but soon when I started working for the students here and devoted myself towards making a better campus life, my hatred was gone. Now I am in immense love with this college. JGLS is my life, my pride and in all the literal sense, this college is my home. It’s a feeling which many disagree on but when I share my experience of this college, people do agree with me. JGLS has changed me and many of others on this campus, this college is immensely beautiful. I now do believe that my decision of choosing law was the best decision I ever took in my life.

Submission By:
Samarpit Gupta
B.A. LLB Class of 2017
Jindal Global Law School|
O.P. Jindal Global University, Sonipat (Haryana)

 

 

Download Now

Where Do Ideas Come From

0
Where Do Ideas Come From

Where do ideas come from?

Ideas don’t come from thinking hard. Sure, you could come up with an idea or two that way – but my best ideas never came that way to me.

That does not mean you should not have a dedicated time to generate new ideas. If you can, please do it. However – this would on its own not help you to generate world-class ideas.

My best ideas come from activities – when I am exposed to something I never did. They come when I am made to think of something that I would not normally think of. My best ideas come from the weirdest (by common standards) things I have done in my life. More new things I do, more new ideas spring to life and wave at me.

If you want to generate great ideas, do lots of disparate things. Many different things – activities, thoughts, books, cultures that will shock your mind. That’s the best way I know – this helps me to generate my best ideas.

Also – remember that great ideas are those on which you are inspired enough to work like a dog. An idea you never execute or just forget about it not a great idea – no matter what potential it may have. Ideas are valuable only if they are executed – otherwise they are worthless junk crowding up your mindspace.

Download Now

Ragging =/= Cool. Why Raggers Suck More Than Ragging Does.

0
Ragging =/= Cool. Why Raggers Suck More Than Ragging Does.

Dear Law School Seniors,

In the recent past, I have observed a rising spate of write ups about the law school experience, or college experiences in general, and more of them than I am comfortable with, tell freshers to be cool with ragging, and excuse the seniors of any personal or social liability from their wanting to rag freshers. The reason they cite for excusing such a (reprehensible) practice can be split into a nullifying total: that though seniors do it for their own entertainment (not positive for fresher) it helps the fresher to get to know the seniors better (positive for fresher) which, of course, has its own positive repercussions.

Ragging, they say, is a “necessary” part of college life, a “rite of passage”, an experience a fresher ought to “man up” to, and “be a sport” about and tolerate, and even appear to enjoy if he can. Now, there’s a tiny problem I have with all this, not the least of which is that ragging is illegal. Law schools, of course, are strange places where in the process of building respect for the rule of law, they end up inculcating a bit of a contempt for laws. And for that much berated word, “morality”. Likewise, i have a lot of contempt for anyone imposing a law’s letter over its spirit, as well anyone imposing their own standards of morality on someone else (standard law school teaching, well digested). That does not mean that I can’t suggest that law students have the basic sense to understand that bullies don’t make friends. They may make Godfathers, not friends.

In all those ice-breaking experiences that ragging is supposed to generate, no one ever walked out with a friend (unless it was the guy pissing in his pants, standing next to you pissing in yours). Yes, it probably acquaints the seniors’ with your name. That, I firmly believe, is the real ice-breaking component of the entire exercise: the simple, memor-able/-izable/-izationworthy exchange of names. It needn’t be mixed up with camouflaged violence, domination/subordination, ego games and involuntary ass-licking. Just because you went through “much worse” when you joined college, doesn’t mandate you to “pass it down”. Also, just because Sati needed a law to abolish it, doesn’t mean every reprehensible tradition (such as ragging is) needs a law to abolish it too. Oh, wait. There already is one!

If it’s worth anything, I speak from experience. I liked every single senior who came up and spoke to me like I was a person, worthy of, if not respect, then basic human decency. I dreaded/ feared each one who didn’t. And, here’s the shocker, when i eventually became a senior i managed to learn the names of, and eventually become friends with, several of my juniors (some of whom forgot mine quickly enough ) without needing them to do menial tasks for me just for an ego massage, for that fleeting feeling of having the power of controlling another person (like, seriously, you want to identify with the kind of people who like that!?). I guess you’re thinking I was probably a “wuss” when I was ragged, rude or over-perky, and “got what I deserved” for “putting on an attitude”. Nah. I was good at getting ragged. An extrovert that I am, I was good at exhibiting myself, and being a sport, and the whole drill. It wasn’t bad for me, you know. Just some invisible pole dancing, impromptu singing, running like a chicken in a race around the “cess-pool”, and introducing myself without arrogance, umpteen number of times. This is nothing, several of you will think. But girls usually don’t get ragged too badly, no? In any case, that was not bad for me. It might be enough to be humiliating for someone less used to making a prat of themselves. For sure, getting ragged will leave you with memories and stories for life, scars too. For some, these might be mental scars.

So, then, this note is for all seniors out there, about to welcome juniors into the horrible place your campus is. You’re in law school and one of the first things you learned is that morality is subjective and that it is contemptible to impose your own standards of morality on someone else. So. Don’t. Your liberty to personally interact with a fresher only extends to the figurative end of his/her nose. Being figurative, you can’t see it. Keep off it. If you want to get to know your juniors, try introducing yourself. It works! And if what you’re really interested in is some entertainment, watch Prison Break.

PS: for those of you who need some bullying, here’s some cud to chew on: http://www.aicte-india.org/anti.htm

Download Now

My Top 3 Internships And What I Learnt From Them

0
My Top 3 Internships And What I Learnt From Them

This article was written by Suraj Raj Kesherwani of UPES, Dehradun. Reading the law school stories of other law students can help you to put your own experiences and aspirations into perspective. However, the best thing to do is to share your own law school stories as well. If you want to share anything, just write it down and send across to [email protected]. Now over to Suraj.

The importance of internship for a law student was first splashed into my mind on the day the CLAT 2013 result was out and my rank was in somewhere around 3000 and I got pretty sure that I am not going to land up in any of the NLU’s. ‘Shashank singhal’ – A person to whom I respect a lot, and who helped me out a lot for my law entrance exams introduced to me the importance of internship for a law student. He stated that internships for a law student have equivalent importance like the academics have. He further explained me the reason behind his statement stating that “what will you do with the knowledge of law if you don’t have any idea to applicate it”. This statement explained me wholly, that what actually is the importance of internships. He further added and said that what if I am not getting a NLU, my dream of becoming a great lawyer is still not end with these results. Internships which play an equivalent importance for a law student is still a way left for me to land up in many good firms and attain a good position in my life through my learning and hard work during my internships.

I started with my first internship at Human Rights Law Network (HRLN), Allahabad, as it was told that NGOs comes out to be the best place for a first year student to start with their internship. I went there with my CV, which actually had nothing at that time except my few school level achievements. But luckily they did not have any procedure of CV basis selection.

My first day was a very normal day with no work. I was just directed to the office for few papers formalities and was briefed with the procedure of the working of the office. There were around 10 co-interns who were doing there internship there at that time. The work atmosphere was totally a professional one. A team of 5 interns was made to do the work.

We use to work under the guidance of Advocate Smriti kartikeya (Coordinator Interns, Uttar Pradesh). The head of HRLN Allahabad is Advocate KK ROY – a very fun loving person who with his oratory skills uses to fascinate the minds of interns by telling the injustice that use to happen in and around the city.

We started our internship with the very normal procedure that they use to follow which was reading the daily newspaper and selecting out a particular case where it seems that any kind of injustice is happening and sending a team at the place where the incident happened or to the party who suffered so that few more information can be gained out. The team has to work on a particular theme or on particular relevant cases. We chose the theme Acid attack cases and we use to work on the relevant acid attack cases in Allahabad and also in its neighboring districts.

It was a quite interesting work to question the authorities and subjected people. (Alas! A feeling that I am a journalist use to arise inside me). Accordingly we were given the task of drafting out the particular case and to file the PIL if required with the help and under the guidance of Smriti mam and KK sir. Apart from drafting out the proposals, my work was also to edit the drafted ones. We also use to visit the High Court for seeing the proceedings of KK Roy sir and smriti mam.

During my internship at HRLN I also got a chance to visit once at Naini jail, Allahabad. Working with an NGO and serving the needy ones is actually a great sense of feeling. This way of work continued for a period of one month and yes, after that one month I was feeling like a working man and those series of cases on which I worked, helped me out to get a little more familiar with the vitality of the city Allahabad and to also with the working of courts and different government offices (Yes! Bribes for even small legal work is a very common and open).

As it was my first internship, even the small field work jobs or spending few hours in courts and peeping into the hectic life of lawyers use to make my day very hectic but yes! When finally I use to return home, I use to feel very joyous, exhilarating and satisfied. A feeling that yes! I have actually utilized a day of my life to the fullest I can, and have done something good both for the society and for myself. It can be said that after the one month internship at HRLN I smelled a great change in my overall personality – my oratory skills, persuading skills, how to present oneself in public and how to behave in corporate world.

If summing up my experience at HRLN Allahabad, I would like to say that I developed immense confidence and the way to behave in a corporate world.

My second internship was at Allahabad High Court Mediation and Conciliation center (AHMCC). Mediation centers are basically the place where the disputes which are running in courts from a very long time and are not coming to a particular end, use to come there, where the case is heard by a particular mediator and he/she tries to help the parties to land up somewhere in between their demands or issue. Mediators are none others but are person who have a great persuading quality and who can influence the either parties to fix up at somewhere between their demands.

Mostly the matrimonial matters use to come in mediation center but land revenue matters, property disputes between family members was also common. My first day at AHMCC got end with learning the briefs and history of Mediation centers. Honorable Judge Mr. Sunil Ambwani briefed us with the rules and working of the mediation center in one of the mediation rooms. He is a very solitary personality.

It was my first conversation with any of the judges and I was quite nervous while talking to him. But after few minutes he flourished a very complacent atmosphere inside the room. My actual internship had to start from the next day. We have to be present there in a black suit, black tie and white shirt.

My second day was an appalling one as I was going through a matrimonial case of a muslim couple, who wanted to get separated. The wife wanted the divorce and a share in the husband’s property, but the husband was not ready to do so. When the case started, somewhere in my mind it was there that this mediation is not going to be successful at the end.

The reason behind was that the way the couples were in hatred with each other. After few hours conversation of the mediators and the parties, and also the separate sessions the mediation succeeded. The parties got ready to live together with each other for a few months and gave their marriage a chance. I was really shocked and fascinated at the end. I was not able to digest that the couple actually wants to get back a happy life by living together.

This case increased my interest a lot in this internship. Every day we use to hear the new cases, but at the 8th day a really different case came. It was again a matrimonial case, where the couples were fighting in the court from past 20 years but yet were not able to settle at a particular point. Even the mediators stated that they have never seen such a case before in their career.

The case started with an aggressive verbal fight between the couples. By looking at that atmosphere nobody could have thought that they are fighting from past 20 years. It was rather looking like a new energetic one. However the session did not ended with a proper settlement and the parties were requested to come again on a newer date. But by the end we were able to understand the vital problem between the couples and there aroused a hope that there can be the settlement on the next date. Generally we interns were not allowed to speak in between the sessions of the case except with the prior permission of the mediator but luckily the mediators in this case allowed to share are views and talk to the couples in the separate sessions. And at the end of the session I was really exalted by one of the mediators.

The internship at AHMCC came out to be a very peculiar one. I went through to almost every type or issues on which a particular couple could have misunderstanding or I can say I came across the reality of greediness of dowry, dreadful acts by the husband towards their wife and many more. This internship landed my mind to the very trivial reason because of which most of the marriages ends up with separation, and it was greediness of more and more money.

If summing up my internship at AHMCC I would say the best thing I learnt there was that how oratory skills and persuading powers can be used at its best. I came across few good things but also few bad things, which are actually the reality of the society.

My third internship was under Sn. Advocate Ashok Khare – Allahabad High Court. A person who’s name is only enough in the history of administrative cases. I went into his chamber with my one of my friends with a request for Internship.

A very big bungalow with a colossal entrance with few guards, 4-5 luxurious cars – I mean I was able to smell the life style of Ashok khare sir. I entered into his chamber, it was really a big one, even more enormous than I was expecting. He was very busy at that time so I was directed towards his son who is also a lawyer at Allahabad High Court. I was again very nervous, not because I was not confident but this time it was the enormous office in which I was walking. With an internship letter and my CV I had few words with Advocate Siddharth khare and I got the internship very normally.

I had to join from the very next day. I was ordered to report at the High court the very next day at 10 am. My first day with Ashok sir in the court went off only with his hearings. I was ordered to report at a particular court room to see the hearing of his case. It was the first time when I was getting a chance to listen him. I went into the court room and waiting for everything to start. He came inside the room and few minutes later judge also entered. He just spoke for 5 minutes, which all was actually getting above my head, but his 5 minutes words concluded the case with the final judgement. And as expected the case rests with him.

In the evening I had to report his chamber and it was my first meeting with him. He did not have even a minute talk with me and I realize that he is a very busy person. He gave few files of cases to read whom hearing has to happen the very next day. The files were too big with too many pages and the cases were mainly related to administrative and educational ones. The cases came out to be very tedious one but somehow I managed to read and understand it. Few days went like this only.

But after 10 days the real work started to come. The work was to edit the proposed drafts. I did not learnt much during this internship of mine as the areas in which the cases use to come were mainly administrative and educational one, and as I was a just first year law student and I had hardly any knowledge in these fields.

If summing up my third internship I would like to say that I did not got chance to learn a lot from this internship as Ashok sir came out to be a very big and busy lawyer and even his field of practice was a way rare. But if taking it into the positive side I was quite lucky to intern under such a big lawyer and learn the intricacies of him, of which I think, will definitely help me out one day in my upcoming internships. I would like to add on a very good saying regarding my experience at my third internship that “Everything happens for a reason”.

With the successful end of my first three internships I am very proud and fortuitous to get a chance to learn all this, of which people dream of.

Download Now

My Two Years At Amity Law School, Rajasthan

0
My Two Years At Amity Law School, Rajasthan

This article is written by Aakritee Gambhir, a student of Amity Law School, Rajasthan. It is being republished from A First Taste of Law archives.
My first start at college was my thirst from stultifying summer after a high school into a world freshly coloured with freedom. It was my first time when I had stepped out of my home without my parents. When I first saw my campus I was mesmerized by its serenic beauty. It was 150 acres campus with beautiful surrounding. I had that mixed feeling, a fear of stepping into a new world without parents and the anxiety of indulging into a new lifestyle which I had always dreamt of. When I reached Amity I was very curious to see the hostels as I had to live there for the rest 5 years. The hostels are very huge consisting of five floors.

The first day at college was a new beginning. It was far better what I had thought of. When I first reached my department I saw it read as AMITY LAW SCHOOL. I saw that I was filled with pleasure as it was the place where I started chasing my dreams. My first week went through the registration process, talent hunt, and healthy interactions with the seniors. During this whole process I was hoping I could find some souls that I would cherish their friendship my entire life. My first day at college was an unforgettable day.

During my school days, I have had a glimpse of college life from my elder’s brothers and sisters. I thought that that the college life would offer me freedom where restrictions would be less and threat of teachers would be little. And at last the D-day came when I witnessed my first day at college. The first day at college is considered to be a important one.

The seniors would make the new comers to indulge in strange actions. So the seniors had worked out on their own strategies like stopping us wherever they could fine the juniors: in class, lectures theatres, cafeteria anywhere, everywhere. The introduction given to seniors consisted a specific pattern; it included name, course, place where I belong, and the main question Why Amity? It was fun giving intros to the seniors as it was the only way we could interact with our seniors. It was the first week when I met my 4th year seniors with whom I spent my first year. They were very helpful and fun loving and as our guide too. In this first week of registration there was not very hectic so we explored the campus. The 150 acres campus had lot to offer. It had a neem forest, amphitheater, a big library, lake side and the beautiful surroundings itself. In the evenings we all friends used to hang out at these places.

During the registrations process, we had to choose one foreign language and as I got late the only language left was Chinese. With no other option left I got Chinese as my optional language. I was very excited and anxiously waiting for my first Chinese class.

Finally after all the registration process we began with our academic classes. On our very first day the teachers gave their introduction and the overview to all the subjects which we were going to study through the semester. The first day was not so hectic. It was fun sitting in the classroom with the other classmates and interacting with them. And gradually this schedule continued. My first Chinese class was a new experience though it was funny. The teacher walked in and he greeted the class in Chinese. He taught us a few words in Chinese which were very hard to pronounce. Just after the couple of weeks my birthday arrived. All of my senior friends and some of my classmates planned a surprise for me.

My eyes filled with tears witnessing that. They made me cut the cake.

After a couple of months, the teachers informed us of our approaching mid terms examination. All of us were very scared to give our very first exam in the university. All of us worked very hard for the examinations. Just after the examinations ended rakshabandhan came. The students who lived near by headed for their homes and the students who lived far away stayed back in the campus itself. I was one of them who stayed at the campus and missed my family. But some of my friends who were there with me cheered me and made me happy. As time passed the university was all set for the end semesters examinations. As I was basically a pure science student, so I had a little bit of problem in going through the Arts subjects. But with hard work and passion I gave my exams. On the last day of the exam each and everybody present at the University was very excited. The reason behind it was that everybody was going home after 6 months long semester.

On 18th October our fresher’s party was scheduled by our seniors. It was the most awaited party after we came to college. Everybody started to prepare to look their best at the party. And finally the day came. The party was well organized by our seniors with lots of games and events. That’s how one year ended at amity.

Sometimes I feel that school was a much better place than college, but when I memorize the cheerful memories of college then I think both have different places in our lives. At school we were carefree as bird but at college we are the peak of our career with lots of responsibility n head. There are peer pressures either it could be from our parents or friends but one must learn or should know how to deal with it. At college we would find many types of friends but it depends upon oneself that what habits we adapt from them. This is because in college we think ourself to be matured and go on doing thinks which are against our values and regret them. After staying at hostel for almost 2 years now I have learned a lot. It taught me some good and some bad lessons. The big friends circle now was converted to small one. Living in hostel teaches you the value of family, time, money in short everything. You become more self-dependent.

The very interesting thing about amity is that every semester they offer you a different basket course. For example: cooking and baking, yoga, dining etiquettes, etc. Attending basket course classes is so much fun. they are very interesting at times. That’s how I cleared my first semester in Amity.

After stepping into second year at Amity I was bit more groomed up, matured, responsible and sincere in my studies. This year we were taught mooing skills. To learn them we were often taken to the moot court and even for court visits. Though court visits are the best reason behind you get to learn a lot from them. Its the only reason behind my interest in mooting. In the very same year I went for a International Moot Court Competition at Amity Lucknow. One of my senior and my classmate accompanied for the same. We reached till the semi-finals. It was a was a new experience for me. Interesting part being when you stand in front of judges and the feeling of being a actual lawyer.

In April 2014 Amity organized Amity Leadership Fest. Different colleges were invited and every department had their own set of events. Fests are the most awaited events in a university. Many big brands like Harley Davidson many more were the official partners for the fest. It was a 3-day fest with cultural events every evening. As I was from the law department I was in the core committee of the same. With the other members we decided the what events to be held and the other minute details. Organizing events at such level was a very tedious job. Any small mistake can lead to disgrace to the university name. It taught me many managing skills. I also participated in the group dancing competition as I am an average dancer. Our group stood third in the competition. Its fun being a part of the event. This is the time when you meet other students from different colleges and get to learn a lot from them.

Just after couple of weeks the university organized the convocation ceremony for the graduating graduates. The amphitheater was well decorated with all the necessary arrangements made. Its pleasure seeing our seniors again in the campus.

Our university organizes Sangathan sports meet every year. This part of the year is the best. It’s mandatory for every student of the university to take part in one of the events. The best part being classes are suspended for almost a week. The students who play and win go to Amity Noida to compete there. At Amity they nurture talents. Each and every student is given a fair opportunity to show is real colors apart from studies.

In no time I reached my fourth semester. I guess at the end of 5 years I would be having a bag full of memories which I will cherish throughout my life. Life at Amity is so good that it feels like a second home to me. As our campus is located at 54 kms far from the Jaipur city it makes it quite difficult for us to commute to Jaipur so often. The best part of Amity is that it is a pure vegetarian campus. It has everything a departmental store, mess, canteen, juice shop. The weather here is quite pleasant in the evenings.

In rainy seasons the campus looks at its best with greenery all around and lake full of water. There are 24 ducks in the lake which makes it look more beautiful and serenic. There are benches put up on the side of the lake where you sit and relax.

When I go and look back it seems it was only a couple of months ago that I came to Amity. Before coming to Amity I was scared that how would I manage at such a place with strangers all around. But now I am glad to see those same people every day. Without them this college would have been boring. It taught me value of money. Whenever you stay in hostels you realize the value of every single penny. Till now my journey has been great at amity. And I am looking forward for much better in future. I have so stay here for 3 more long years but when I look back these 3 years seem so short. Amity helped me to be a better person than I was.

Continuous mooting also helped me to improve upon my speaking skills. Academically I am an average student. At Amity every student is under the supervision of their respective mentors. They take care of the mentee academic status, co-curricular activity, etc. and keep a strong check on their mentee. Recently Amity Jaipur has introduced semester exchange program in which a student is given a opportunity to go abroad and study for a semester in the abroad campuses of amity. I am planning to visit one of them in my next semester. I basically look forward towards a bright future after graduating from Amity.

Spending 2 years in amity was fun with lots of legal learning and I am looking forward to be a good lawyer at the end of 5th year. A last I would say these 2years at amity till now have probably been the best time of my life, as I got to learn a lot from here not only academically but socially also. I am looking forward to more beautiful moments to be spent at amity in the next 3 years. I know that the journey ahead is not so easy but with such learned teachers and supporting family and friends the road ahead would seem to be easy and smooth. Hardships do come in way but we must learn to overcome them. I personally believe in the principle that First you deserve and then you desire.

Download Now

Networking In Law School

0
Networking In Law Schools

“But I don’t have any contacts!” This is the biggest complaint I have heard in law school. Some people have this mythical ‘contacts’, usually through dad or family friends, and there are the other people who are not from such impressive backgrounds and claim to be suffering unfairly because of this lack of ‘contacts’.

I always laughed at these people. There are two rules I have learnt about networking –

  • Firstly, there is nothing unfair about knowing people and having a relationship in which they feel glad or obliged to help you. That sort of position comes from hard work and ability to generate value.
  • Secondly, you can have your own network (which the uninitiated calls ‘contacts’) even if your dad or uncle does not. Your own contacts are always better than your dad’s contacts.

Good networking skill is a prerequisite of professional success. Without it, your professional life will never have the Midas touch! In this post, I will discuss the ways in which you can develop some basic networking skills.

Whom to meet?

The first thing before you start off networking is to know what sort of people you want to network. Set out your goal for the next three years with regard to what you want to be and what you want to achieve, and approach people who can help you in reaching that position. Make a list of people you want to meet.

Homework before meeting

Before you meet someone, do a bit of homework; make sure that you have looked through the person’s Linkedin, Facebook profile. If you have got some common friends, then don’t forget to collect a bit of information about the likes and dislikes of the person you are going to meet. People generally appreciate the fact that you know more than their name and designation. This acts as a first step for winning people over.

Reach out at personal level

However, just reaching out to people is not enough. Your long contact list on phone or facebook friend list is not the true reflector of the number of friends you are having. Your friends are those you can turn up to in times of need. Networking should be more about making friends. When you meet a person, don’t start selling yourself immediately but create a relationship based on trust and confidence. If you have taken out some time to meet a person you want to network with, give her your undivided attention. Establish a connection by sharing common interests, hobby, and experiences.

Follow-Up

To make lasting contacts, you need to follow up with people you meet or else you will lose touch. According to Keith Ferrazzi, follow-up is the hammer and nails of your networking tool kit. How do you follow up? Once you have met the person, drop a mail, don’t forget to mention some relevant part of the conversation that you had, send thank you note to express gratitude for taking out the time for the meeting if that is appropriate, otherwise send a mail telling them how happy you felt when you met. Never let your network forget you. The most successful guys don’t only develop a good network, they also know how to remain on the top of everyone’s mind. If you come across information that you think may be useful to anyone in your network, take a moment to send it across.

If you want to be successful, you need to learn how to share and care, this is the key to being good at networking. I’ll write more about networking in my next post. Sign up on the top left a corner of this page to make sure that you receive it by mail in your inbox! Share it with friends on Facebook if you liked it. Thanks!

Download Now

Sail like Sindbad: The Goal and Life in Law School

0
Sail like Sindbad: The Goal and Life in Law School

Republished from A First Taste of Law archives.

Sail through your life in law school

I got out of my hostel room at 4 in the morning. I had not slept yet, and I like the soothing breeze and sound of chirping birds that comes from my window early in the morning which turns into a hustle- bustle in the later part of the morning.

My friends have left almost no stone unturned in trying to teach me how harmful it is to stay awake till that late. However, at the end it zeroes down to your choice, this is the first thing that law school and hostel provide you with, liberty and independence to make your own choices which obviously comes with its own responsibilities.

Coming back to the scene from where I started, when I stepped out of my room to fill water in my empty bottle and looked around for my slipper, I found that one of them was missing. That was ridiculous, loss of a pair of slipper is understandable, but one slipper, who on earth will bother to take it!! With this thought in my mind, I started the hunt for my slippers, inside the room, in the alcove I live in, in the corridor – but alas my slipper seemed to have deserted me. Glumly, without my slipper, I went bare feet and came back after filling water, wondering over the next course of action – should I borrow a pair from someone, or should I go and buy a new one. Oh! the unnecessary hassle I will incur in going all the way to buy a slipper in my not-a-moment-to-die-schedule. It seemed to be the saddest thing to happen to me. Loss of my slipper!

The case of lost slipper: How is it relevant?

The story of my lost slipper just provided you a scoop of things that matter when you are in law school, in the hostel. The frivolous thing you never bothered about at home seems to add to the mountain of things you need to do. From buying toothpaste to the servicing of your laptop, it’s you who is responsible for doing all of this. From getting your clothes washed to washing your own dishes, you are left absolutely on your own.
This independence permeates into academics as well, from worrying about projects, moots, conferences, committees, there are a hell lot of things to do and it’s just you who is responsible for all of it, amongst your caring, weird friends; Cut Throat, arrogant batch mates; cranky, roommate; bitchy neighbour; cocky seniors; “wicked” faculty. (Okay, I am not saying that you will find only bad people around you, I bet you will be able to find a good number of awesome people as well!).

In this sea of starfishes, whales, sharks, crocodiles and what not, you need to do the “finding Nimo” act. However, it will be only you who will be searching for yourself. Find an identity for yourself, a mission to accomplish before you lose yourself completely and before you are declared as a lost case.

Small, trivial things constitute your life in law school, adding the fun, tension, glumness, happiness quotient to it, the unwarranted special mess food can bring a big smile in your face while the discovery of the case of a lost slipper can send you into panic and depression. Sail through it, though there will be troughs and crests, but remember not to get drowned, at the end you will reach the shore, and your journey will better than that of Sindbad!

How do you make the smooth sail possible:

Don’t focus on the slipper.

The only way to survive in multitudes of things happening around you, some of which you do not control and do not want – is to focus on your goals. Don’t worry about the trivial – don’t break your head over things, not in your control. Work on the bigger picture – if you can achieve the biggest goals in your life, the small things are bound to fall in place. But do you have the bigger goals worthy of pursuing? Captain of a ship who doesn’t know where he should go with the ship is unlikely to have a great voyage. Decide on your goals early in law school, you are free to change them later – but through all the madness, one way to cut through and do really well is to have a mission to accomplish.

Case Study 1: Ramanuj: Joined law school after dropping a year to learn English. From a small town, went to a not-well-known Bengali medium local school. After joining law school, he was overwhelmed by the volume of academic work, hi-fi classmates, lack of social skills, his own inability to communicate and speak in proper English. After the first semester, it was difficult – he had few friends, couldn’t connect to most of the people around (again, his own fault). He focussed on one thing – problems. One day he made a list of things that were troubling him – finance, communication skills, not having contacts at desirable quarters (his own or his father’s), and he set out deliberately to solve them. He was driven by an ambition to be excellent – but doing well in the class did not seem to be a great goal for him. End of story, he ended up solving most of the problems he started with and had a very interesting journey through law school. He travelled far and wide, taught, started his own business, and voila, at one point he was doing academically well too – despite investing very little time in it.

Case Study 2: Abhyudaya: A batchmate of Ramanuj’s, Abhyudaya was a bright kid when he joined law school. Before law school happened, he lived in Peddar Road in Bombay, and went to a sought-after school in Bombay and earned his share of accolades. He defined hard working bright law school kid – and he was resourceful. Still, he wanted to do something extraordinary – something people could not predict he will achieve. He focused on tasks one at a time – doing well in exams, cricket, moot – the usual law school stuff. However, the success in the usual stuff can give you only mediocre satisfaction – hundreds of people have done it before you, thousands will do it later. He liked finance as a subject, and he focused on becoming an expert in corporate laws. He didn’t study it in order to do well in exams and get into societies and write a couple of articles – he did it to be a real expert at it, with real world benefits. By the time he was in 5th year, he was generally acknowledged as the expert that he wanted to be – in fact, the junior batch requested him to take classes for them outside the scheduled corporate law classes – so that they can learn what they thought the regular teacher could not teach them. When you reach this level – the smalls things people fight over becomes really insignificant – a chat with him, and any law firm will want to hire him, any client will be impressed, anyone will be happy to friend like him – great accomplishments and insights combined with great humility.
Both Ramanuj and Abhyudaya write for this blog – Ramanuj having started it in his second year in law school. Both of them work in a law firm in Mumbai as of now.

Take away: identify your goal and be sincere about it – life will take you where you want to go. Focus on the bigger picture, not the slipper and the mess food.
The idea of concentrating on the goals- pointed out and elaborated by Ramanuj Mukherjee.

Download Now
logo
FREE & ONLINE 3-Day Bootcamp (LIVE only) on

How Can Experienced Professionals Become Independent Directors

calender
28th, 29th Mar, 2026, 2 - 5pm (IST) &
30th Mar, 2026, 7 - 10pm (IST).
Bootcamp starting in
Days
HRS
MIN
SEC
Abhyuday AgarwalCOO & CO-Founder, LawSikho

Register now

Abhyuday AgarwalCOO & CO-Founder, LawSikho