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<blockquote data-quote="Jessica Booker" data-source="post: 104736" data-attributes="member: 2672"><p>It is easy to apply (anyone can apply for a role) but how easy it is to secure such a transger is a different matter. It is really going to depend on your experience within your home jurisdiction and how in demand that experience is within the new country. Transfers typically happen because they need a lawyer qualified in X jurisdiction to help on matters that cross into Y jurisdiction, In most instances, you cannot just work on matters in countries you are not qualified to give advice on which means your experience needs to outweigh the domestic market or bring something to the table that the domestic market cannot offer.</p><p></p><p>Permanent secondments are only likely once qualified and for something like HK to UK is more likely to happen at around 3+ years PQE rather than as a NQ.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Jessica Booker, post: 104736, member: 2672"] It is easy to apply (anyone can apply for a role) but how easy it is to secure such a transger is a different matter. It is really going to depend on your experience within your home jurisdiction and how in demand that experience is within the new country. Transfers typically happen because they need a lawyer qualified in X jurisdiction to help on matters that cross into Y jurisdiction, In most instances, you cannot just work on matters in countries you are not qualified to give advice on which means your experience needs to outweigh the domestic market or bring something to the table that the domestic market cannot offer. Permanent secondments are only likely once qualified and for something like HK to UK is more likely to happen at around 3+ years PQE rather than as a NQ. [/QUOTE]
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