9 Myths of Work/Life Balance in Law

PAR’s Mythbusters pro­vides hard data to bust nine key myths about work/​life bal­ance in the legal profession:

Myth 1: Work/​life bal­ance is a women’s issue.

Myth 2: Law firms are try­ing hard, but the prob­lems of retain­ing women and offer­ing work/​life bal­ance are too intractable.

Myth 3: Law firms lose money on part-​​timers.

Myth 4: You can tell whether you will be able to work part-​​time by check­ing a law firm’s website.

Myth 5: Going “in house” is the way to achieve balance.

Myth 6: Going into the gov­ern­ment or pub­lic inter­est law is the way to achieve balance.

Myth 7: “I’ll just take off a year or two when I have my kids, and then I’ll go back to prac­tic­ing law.”

Myth 8: Work/​life bal­ance is incon­sis­tent with the prac­tice of law at the high­est levels.

Myth 9: Young lawyers say they want work/​life bal­ance, but when the chips are down they really want the high­est pos­si­ble salary.

The Project for Attorney Retention (PAR) stud­ies work/​life issues in legal employ­ment. Its web site includes infor­ma­tion for lawyers and law firms about non-​​stigmatized part-​​time pro­grams, best prac­tices for retain­ing attor­neys through alter­na­tive work sched­ules, and how part-​​time really is at dif­fer­ent firms:

To kick off PAR’s Law School Project, PAR co-​​director Joan Williams spoke at two events last week: a law stu­dent event for the Women’s Bar Association of the District of Columbia, and the Ms. J.D. con­fer­ence at Yale Law School. PAR’s Law School project is designed to help legal employ­ers respond effec­tively to the desire of many law stu­dents for legal jobs that offer both the oppor­tu­nity to prac­tice law at the high­est level and the oppor­tu­nity for work/​life balance.

One resource for law stu­dents is How to Find a Job that Allows for Work/​Life Balance, co-​​written by PAR and the Stanford Law School Office of Career Services.

Via Up to Par: PAR launches the PAR Law School Project

Related articles