Lawyers in general spend most of their time in offices, their own or those of others.
They also spend time meeting with clients and other people involved in matters they are working on, or in courts of law, or in mediation.
Lawyers can spend time in all kinds of places which relate to their area of practise, as well as in places where they need to conduct research.
Basically, lawyers can work practically anywhere; it simply depends on what work they're engaged in at the time.
A qualified Lawyer can on work on simple matters, a Qualified, Trained, Experienced Constitutional Lawyer specialises in the Constitution
Lawyers have a very wide range of incomes. Lawyers are extremely well paid for what they do (clients are usually billed at the rate of at least $300/hour of legal work, and it can be much higher) however, not all lawyers get as much work as they want to have. No one is obligated to seek your services as a lawyer, and there are a lot of lawyers to choose from. At the present time, there is an over supply. We are drowning in lawyers.
lawyers work for the state. Maya Devon's address is herdendev@yahoo.com
some do and some do not it all depends on what type of field they are working in.
depends on how many lawyers you pay to work for you
I would imagine they do have to work outside of regular business hours considering all the paperwork they have to do.
no they dont
no they work for u
corperate lawyers family lawyers environmental lawyers immigration lawyers criminal and justice lawyers business lawyers
Criminal lawyers work for the state as prosecutors and public defenders, they work for private firms, or they work for themselves as solo practitioners.
Lawyers work in multiple places. They work in official city or county buildings working for the city or county and they can also work in a private firm.
No