Post by account_disabled on Dec 19, 2023 16:56:27 GMT 7
Address will not be published. Mandatory fields are marked with * Comment * Nume * Email * Site web Save my name, email and website in this browser for the next time I comment. The profession of lawyer - interview with Ana-Viorica Puşcaşu ware Interviews minutes • Ana-Maria Lovin • July , The classic and at the same time official definition of the lawyer presents the lawyer as a self-employed person subject to a professional order who has the competence to represent the client before the courts or other persons of public or private law and to provide judicial or extrajudicial assistance to him or the person for whom it was proposed ex officio. In reality, the profile of a lawyer is defined by a noble person who has the desire to do justice regardless of obstacles. It emphasizes the central idea that a good lawyer cannot be just if he is not humane. In an interview given to Avocatoo.
Ana-Viorica Puşcaşu, permanent lawyer, member of Vrancea Bar Association country email list talks to us about the profession of lawyer, offering advice to young people who want to go towards this profession. What made you choose this job? And what was the moment when you knew that this job suited you? A.V.P.: Choosing to be a lawyer came somewhat naturally to me since college. I lived in a family where discussions about legal issues were normal, daily considering that my father was a jurist, then a prosecutor and a judge, and currently a lawyer. In fact, I owe my choice of faculty to my father, as well as my choice of law school. During college, when I came home on weekends or on vacations, I helped my father at the law office, studying files or assisting in discussions or drafting actions, appeals or appeals. So the choice came naturally and at this moment.
I wouldn't see myself practicing anything else (magistrate or lawyer). What attracts you most to the legal profession? A.V.P.: The fact that you can have your own program, you don't have to depend on others. You can choose your clients or the subject you want to work on. You have complete freedom. Moreover, you can choose to practice law in all areas of law, constrained in any way. Is lawyering a profession that can be learned or is a multitude of criteria also needed to achieve success? A.V.P.: Yes, it is a job that can be learned, but something else is also needed. In the sense that in college you have the basis - you learn, let's say, the letter of the law, and in law school you learn to put the law into practice, to use it in different cases. Being a lawyer definitely requires constant study, in the sense that you will have to read the judicial practice in order to learn.
Ana-Viorica Puşcaşu, permanent lawyer, member of Vrancea Bar Association country email list talks to us about the profession of lawyer, offering advice to young people who want to go towards this profession. What made you choose this job? And what was the moment when you knew that this job suited you? A.V.P.: Choosing to be a lawyer came somewhat naturally to me since college. I lived in a family where discussions about legal issues were normal, daily considering that my father was a jurist, then a prosecutor and a judge, and currently a lawyer. In fact, I owe my choice of faculty to my father, as well as my choice of law school. During college, when I came home on weekends or on vacations, I helped my father at the law office, studying files or assisting in discussions or drafting actions, appeals or appeals. So the choice came naturally and at this moment.
I wouldn't see myself practicing anything else (magistrate or lawyer). What attracts you most to the legal profession? A.V.P.: The fact that you can have your own program, you don't have to depend on others. You can choose your clients or the subject you want to work on. You have complete freedom. Moreover, you can choose to practice law in all areas of law, constrained in any way. Is lawyering a profession that can be learned or is a multitude of criteria also needed to achieve success? A.V.P.: Yes, it is a job that can be learned, but something else is also needed. In the sense that in college you have the basis - you learn, let's say, the letter of the law, and in law school you learn to put the law into practice, to use it in different cases. Being a lawyer definitely requires constant study, in the sense that you will have to read the judicial practice in order to learn.