Updating Results

Clayton Utz

3.8
  • 1,000 - 50,000 employees

2021 Seasonal Clerkship Program - Canberra

Opportunity expired

Opportunity details

  • Opportunity typeInternship, Clerkship or Placement
  • Application open dateApply by 12 Jul 2021

Our Clerkship programs

If you’re a law student in your penultimate year, our Clerkship Programs will expose you to the fast pace of a full-service commercial law firm and show you the law in action. You'll be working under the guidance of some of the sharpest legal minds in Australia, on challenging, complex and high-profile transactions and matters. You'll be mentored by partners and lawyers who are leaders in their fields, in a firm where individuality is embraced and innovation actively encouraged.

Our Clerkship Programs are our future pipeline for the Graduate Program. They are designed to give you a feel for what it’s like to be a Graduate and they are a great place to start your career.

Our 11-week program gives you an orientation week in the Sydney office, followed by two rotations in different practice areas. You'll also get additional training, networking opportunities and be part of our social activities. 

Program Dates

We run one Clerkship Program every year: 

Summer: 23 November 2021 - 5 February 2022
 

Recruitment Dates

TBA

Qualifications & other requirements

You should have or be completing the following to apply for this opportunity.

Degree or Certificate
Study field
Study field (any)

Hiring criteria

  • Experience requirementNo experience required
  • Study fields
    Law, Legal Studies & Justice
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Reviews

user
Graduate
Canberra
5 months ago

I have been working on some big matters and have generally been working on tasks for those matters. Additionally I have been picking up work around that and have gotten experience in making chronologies, summarising medical documents and drafting an advice or brief to counsel.

user
3 PQE Lawyer
Sydney
5 months ago

This is extremely team dependent. Personally I am tasked with the negotiation, drafting and project management of various 'deals' - i.e. the legal aspects of an acquisition or financing which requires contracts to be entered into. At the more junior level (i.e. when you just start) you are typically expected to do banal checks of documents until you prove you have the attention to detail required to: (i) learn what the documents do; and (ii) therefore apply the risk tolerance of your respective client to the words in those documents. This is like learning a new language.

user
Graduate
Sydney
5 months ago

As a graduate I am given the opportunity to get involved in lots of really interesting, high profile matters. I am treated like a lawyer in the team and I am given meaningful work like drafting key legal documents, attending team meetings to contribute to the strategy and conduct of matters, managing the preparation of briefs to counsel, reviewing documents and conducting legal research.

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About the employer

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Clayton Utz

Rating

3.8

Number of employees

1,000 - 50,000 employees

Industries

Law

Proudly Australian. Globally connected. As one of Australia's leading law firms, Clayton Utz gives confident, innovative and incisive legal advice.

Pros and cons of working at Clayton Utz

Pros

  • The best there is. You know where you stand with people here. If you come into the firm eager to learn and apply yourself to the work, everyone will invest in you.

  • As a graduate, I am given the opportunity to get involved in lots of really interesting, high-profile matters.

  • The partners really care about the people in their team and I have felt supported and accepted throughout my experience at the firm.

  • The support system at the firm helps with this quite a lot. People are able to maintain a great work-life balance as long as they communicate well.

  • Diversity is a strong factor at Clayton Utz. It is embraced throughout the firm, and everyone is welcoming of differing backgrounds and opinions.

Cons

    • The hours can be (very) long during busy periods and there can be limited flexibility during those times.

    • Remuneration could be better.

    • They could improve the office snacks.

    • The work demands.

    • They provide so much training, almost too much.