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i-paralegal.com Explains the Role of Paralegals

Added: (Fri Aug 26 2005)

According to i-paralegal.com, paralegals may work for a law firm, a corporation, the government, or any organization that deals with the law. A beginning paralegal will probably spend most of his or her time filing, photocopying, organizing papers and running errands.



The paralegal profession developed during the 1960s, when people were trained to help lawyers in order to provide legal services to those who could not typically afford them. Paralegals support lawyers and are trained to help law offices run smoothly.



Generally, there are two types of paralegals: litigation and corporate. Litigation paralegals are in charge of documents for trial cases. Corporate paralegals, on the other hand, spend most of their days organizing the paperwork associated with business dealings. A corporate paralegal, much like a litigation paralegal, makes sure the sets of paperwork are identical, ordering documents, and photocopying them.



i-paralegal.com also explains that the educational background of paralegal will help to determine the type of work he or she will be doing. If, for example, a paralegal took social work classes in college, she may have a better chance of working in a social justice firm or government office firm.



Paralegals provides detailed information about paralegal jobs, schools, training, courses, certificates, and services. Paralegals is the sister site of Notary Public Web.

Submitted by: Kent Pinkerton Find out more.
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