Abstract

http://ssrn.com/abstract=2523027
 


 



The Anatomy of Legal Recruitment in India: Tracing the Tracks of Globalization


Jonathan Gingerich


UCLA Department of Philosophy

Vikramaditya S. Khanna


University of Michigan Law School

Aditya Singh


White and Case

November 11, 2014

HLS Center on the Legal Profession Research Paper No. 2014-25

Abstract:     
Globalization is changing the Indian legal profession through, among other things, its effects on the corporate legal sector and legal education. Although these changes have generated considerable discussion, relatively little is known about one of the critical channels through which they are occurring – the legal recruitment process in India. Understanding recruitment is important not only because it influences the membership of the profession, but also because it serves as a bridge between the profession and legal education. In this paper we explore this topic through a detailed description and analysis of recruitment in the corporate legal sector in India as well as through a series of detailed interviews of those involved in it.

We find that recruitment processes at the elite law schools in India have changed substantially over the last 20 years. Prior to liberalization in 1991 most recruitment was rather ad hoc and geared to obtaining positions in litigation. After 1991 the recruitment process began to change to accommodate increasing demand from the corporate legal sector, which grew rapidly as the Indian economy increasingly interacted with global forces. This led to the current model where recruitment is largely organized through reliance on student run recruitment coordination committees (RCCs), which play important intermediation and facilitation roles for students and corporate legal employers. We explore the formation, structure, norms and functioning of RCCs in greater depth along with the question of why this recruitment structure may have developed in the 1990s in India.

However, recruitment processes in India have continued to adapt so that now there appears to be an emerging and somewhat more mixed recruitment model where corporate legal sector employers rely on student-facilitated processes, but also appear to be making greater use of internships, professional recruitment services, and in-service training. This, we argue, is associated with changes wrought by India’s increasing interaction with globalization over the last few years. Our analysis thus provides insights into India’s recruitment processes, how they have changed over time, the role of globalization in them, and the impact of (and on) the corporate legal sector and legal education in India.

Number of Pages in PDF File: 54


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Date posted: November 12, 2014  

Suggested Citation

Gingerich, Jonathan and Khanna, Vikramaditya S. and Singh, Aditya, The Anatomy of Legal Recruitment in India: Tracing the Tracks of Globalization (November 11, 2014). HLS Center on the Legal Profession Research Paper No. 2014-25. Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=2523027

Contact Information

Jonathan Gingerich
UCLA Department of Philosophy ( email )
405 Hilgard Avenue
Box 951451
Los Angeles, CA 90095
United States
HOME PAGE: http://jonathangingerich.net
Vikramaditya S. Khanna (Contact Author)
University of Michigan Law School ( email )
625 South State Street
Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1215
United States
734-615-6959 (Phone)
Aditya Singh
White and Case
Miami, FL
United States
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