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I agree that the BIGLAW model, as it exists today (e.g. new litigation associates spend 2 or 3 years in the library) is very unlikely to survive mature LLMs. But possibly there will be a spike in demand for warm bodies to be in the courtroom.
Well the way it happens is that the legislature passes some new law which gives people a cause of action for some wrong. Or the courts expand the concept of due process. More lawsuits or proceedings get filed. The courts get more of a backlog. So more judges need to get hired and more courthouses built. And in fact, there are far more judges now than there were in the past.
Here's an example: It used to be that if you were denied some government benefit, such as welfare or social security or unemployment insurance, you were out of luck. But nowadays, you have a right to a speedy hearing before an administrative law judge. Making more work for attorneys. Possibly in the future this process will continue.
Right, but I don't see the incentive for governments to expand the existing systems, which are already getting seriously backlogged (at least around here).
The trend over the years has been to expand and expand and expand -- despite the fact that it costs the government money.
I mean, expanding areas where they are capable of grifting and grafting.
The courts aren't particularly suitable for that.
The courts are more just targets for ideological subversion.
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