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  1. Transactional attorneys work out terms and technical language related to the completion of an exchange, project, offering, securitization, deal, or other economic activity. Litigation attorneys resolve disputes, claims, conflicts, and adversarial proceedings.

  2. You should be asking whether you might enjoy, or at least contently tolerate, litigation work. Many, many litigators are quite miserable. A handful actually love it for years. Personally, I’m beginning to feel as though the American adversary system is not the best we could have devised. Lawyers regularly attack each other instead of the issues.

  3. The nice thing is that a lot of probate lawyers don't like/want litigation and refer them to someone who can litigate them. You can use your experience to your advantage, and develop a probate practice with a litigation-lite bent.

  4. Litigation isn't for everyone. Some people love it and some people hate it, and you will have to figure out for yourself whether you like it. In my opinion, there are two ways to be successful in litigation--either hustle and get your own clients or become indispensable to someone that has a lot of clients. 15. Reply.

  5. What’s the deal with litigation? This sub seems to discuss litigation less than other transactional groups, and I’ve seen vague references to how different litigation is in both work and exit options. I’m heading to commercial litigation at a V100 firm as a lateral mid level. I’m coming from JAG.

  6. Litigation is a really large field and is essentially when lawyers engage in a lawsuit. It's one of 2 (borderline 3) different broad areas of law. The other is transactional law- which is essentially creating contracts.

  7. If you are more of a risk taker and are not bothered by courtroom battles or pugnacious opposing counsel, then litigation will seem less stressful than the transactional type law. There is no one-size fits all answer to your question.

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