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<blockquote data-quote="TCinpipeline" data-source="post: 168898" data-attributes="member: 17355"><p>[USER=30937]@axelbeugre[/USER] Thank you for this. On your last point, can I mention that I am interested in litigation and arbitration on the back of having attended open days and found that research and drafting is needed in these areas of law which I particularly enjoy (I can give examples of doing these tasks in pro-bono work) and that it can cover international law that makes it most interesting. I have worked on carrying out checks on matters we have not been able to proceed due to some entities being involved with Russia where they have been sanctioned due to being connected to the Ukraine war - can I mention this as finding it interesting in a international context? I work on documents where we are giving EU securitisation advice however, I am not clued up to understand and explain it in a legal context if asked about it in interview. Securitisation is not an area of law I find interesting. I don't think running conflict checks and not having enough interest on EU securitisation law is directly linked enough to show interest in international law. Do you see where it is difficult to state you find specific work interesting if you don't have a direct link. Can you advise on this point? Thank you.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="TCinpipeline, post: 168898, member: 17355"] [USER=30937]@axelbeugre[/USER] Thank you for this. On your last point, can I mention that I am interested in litigation and arbitration on the back of having attended open days and found that research and drafting is needed in these areas of law which I particularly enjoy (I can give examples of doing these tasks in pro-bono work) and that it can cover international law that makes it most interesting. I have worked on carrying out checks on matters we have not been able to proceed due to some entities being involved with Russia where they have been sanctioned due to being connected to the Ukraine war - can I mention this as finding it interesting in a international context? I work on documents where we are giving EU securitisation advice however, I am not clued up to understand and explain it in a legal context if asked about it in interview. Securitisation is not an area of law I find interesting. I don't think running conflict checks and not having enough interest on EU securitisation law is directly linked enough to show interest in international law. Do you see where it is difficult to state you find specific work interesting if you don't have a direct link. Can you advise on this point? Thank you. [/QUOTE]
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