It seems like most academic posts on here are for career paths that lead to becoming a professor. I am interested in academic research, but not necessarily one of those fellowships that are focused on teaching. I want to research, develop my ideas, write papers, publish, etc. I'm neutral about teaching, I don't care for it but I can do it if necessary. I am interested in either working for a university, or any organization where my job would be research and writing focused, but from a theory standpoint rather than on immediate cases.
Outside the legal field, I've seen a lot of academic research and writing positions like PhDs and praedocs, post-docs, or general research positions at Universities etc. What are some equivalent positions in the legal field? Or non-university positions that would involve this?
academic positions non-professor Forum
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Re: academic positions non-professor
consider looking into research fellows at think tanks (university-affiliate or non-university-affiliate)
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Re: academic positions non-professor
This is pretty much the default for lots and lots and lots of professors. Teaching is the necessary evil that gets you the position where you’re paid to write. The Climenko fellowship at Harvard (and other similar ones at Chicago and elsewhere, I forget their names) are teaching-focused only as a means of funding you; the purpose/goal is for you to publish.Anonymous User wrote:I want to research, develop my ideas, write papers, publish, etc. I'm neutral about teaching, I don't care for it but I can do it if necessary.
Look at what you’ve seen outside the legal field and think about what the legal equivalent would be. There are a lot of “general research” positions in STEM fields where the model is for a head publisher (PI) to get grants to fund people to do the research that gets written up under the PI’s name. This is much less common in humanities-type fields unless you can get attached to a research institute in a particular field. They’re all still very competitive jobs.Outside the legal field, I've seen a lot of academic research and writing positions like PhDs and praedocs, post-docs, or general research positions at Universities etc. What are some equivalent positions in the legal field? Or non-university positions that would involve this?
The think tank suggestion works, but many (not all) will expect a PhD if they’re looking for an advanced degree. It’s also not as easy as it sounds to find these jobs. But look for job listings aimed at PhD students in relevant fields, you might find them there. (H-Net maintains posts for history research positions, for instance, and the various professional associations for poli sci etc PhDs will too.)