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Paralegals
Paralegals perform substantive legal work under
the supervision of an attorney. They may gather research data
for use as evidence to formulate defense or to initiate legal
action. They are not authorized to directly represent an individual
client. Paralegals typically have a four-year college degree
and/or a paralegal certificate from a specialist program such
as the Justice Center's Paralegal
Certificate Program. Legal secretaries prepare legal
papers and correspondence, such as summonses, complaints, motions,
and subpoenas, and provide other secretarial support to lawyers.
- Occupational information. Visit
a licensed AKCIS site to get
cccupational outlook and average starting salary information
for social service positions in Alaska, including legal assistant
(paralegal) and clerical positions including legal secretary.
State of Alaska
Associate attorney is a State of Alaska job class representing
duties of a "mixed" nature, containing those of a paralegal
and/or a law clerk and designed to free others on the professional
staff to devote full time to problems requiring legal expertise.
The State of Alaska also has paralegal and legal secretary
job classes.
- Workplace
Alaska. Workplace Alaska is the online recruitment process
for all classified positions Range 8 and above with the State
of Alaska. Search for Job
Class Specifications to learn about paralegal and legal service
job classes, including Paralegal Assistant I-II, Associate
Attorney I-II, and Legal Secretary I-II. See Job
Posting -- By Department to check for current job postings
for the Department of Law. Vacancies can be searched by
other criteria through the Vacancy
Postings Board.
Local
- Alaska Association
of Paralegals (formerly Alaska Association
of Legal Assistants). AAP was founded in 1981 as a professional
association of Alaska paralegals, and is a member organization
of the National Federation of Paralegal Associations (NFPA).
AAP maintains a local job bank available through the "members-only"
portion of its website.
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