Reciprocity Program
For job seekers everywhere, it can be challenging to look for employment outside the region where your law school is located.
Accordingly, members of The National Association for Law Placement (NALP) support a policy of providing job search resources to students and graduates of other law schools through a system called “reciprocity.”
Reciprocity allows law schools to provide reasonable access to their career resources for students and graduates from other law schools that agree to provide similar services. ֱ Law, as a member of NALP, participates in reciprocity with other law schools around the nation.
Reciprocity typically involves two benefits for students and alumni:
- Alumni job bulletins shared among networked law schools.
- Visit privileges that allow a job seeker to use another law school’s career office resources
Each of these benefits is described below in greater depth, as well as instructions on how to use them. It is important to understand that reciprocity is only one method in the job search process. Individuals seeking jobs in other markets must explore other sources for targeting employers in different regions (like the internet, networking, alumni outreach, bar associations, national legal directories, etc.). While schools are usually generous to visitors, every law school—including ֱ—must take steps to ensure that its resources are reserved primarily for the benefit its own students. Toward that end, law schools establish their own appropriate policies to regulate visitor use of their career resources.
ֱ and dozens of law schools around the nation share alumni job postings, commonly called “job bulletins,” through sharing agreements.
The contents of these bulletins vary according to each law school. The overwhelming majority of postings are for graduates. However, even student job seekers may benefit from these postings. Alumni postings provide valuable leads to legal employers who are in serious need of additional legal talent---and a summer clerk or entry-level graduate could fill that need in the short or long term.
For the current Intercollegiate Job Bank link and password, log into your 12Twenty Account and access the Announcements page. Click on the link to access the log on screen (also linked ) and enter the current password (from the Announcements page).
Reciprocity visit privileges for students and graduates typically contemplate an actual visit to the law school career office in your desired location.
It is important to understand that each law school has its own reciprocity requirements. Each law school determines the scope of the resources visitors may use. In addition, law schools within the same region or metropolitan area ordinarily do not extend reciprocity visit privileges to students or graduates from neighboring law schools. Also, metropolitan areas with several law schools typically expect the visitor to request reciprocity from only one school in that area. If reciprocity privileges are granted, students/graduates should be sure to read and honor the reciprocity policy of the host school.
Reciprocity visit privileges may include access to career library resources, handouts, local legal newspapers, alumni job postings, and other listings. Virtually all law schools (including ֱ) exclude counseling, resume / letter critiques, or other advising from reciprocity services. Carefully review the reciprocity privileges of law schools in the region where you wish to visit.
One of the best reasons to request reciprocity privileges is to do localized career research on legal employers in your target geographic market outside Southeastern Pennsylvania, New Jersey, or Delaware. Career offices usually maintain helpful local legal resources unique to that law school’s region. Such resources include local legal newspapers, regional bar association directories and publications, and other career materials focused on the law school’s “home base.” However, while some local legal publications and directories are available only in hard copy, you may be able to access vast amounts of localized information via the internet.
For more information about specific law schools and their reciprocity privilege policies, please check the NALP website at . The reciprocity policies included on this site have been provided by NALP member law schools and are posted here as an information service only. (Schools with inactive links on this list have not yet provided their reciprocity policies to NALP.)
Before you visit another law school’s career office, the Office of Career Strategy and Advancement at ֱ Law must request privileges from your desired law school on your behalf.
Therefore, the first step is for you to determine what law school you wish to visit and when you will be able to get there.
Next, you must contact the Office of Career Strategy and Advancement to make your request. To make your request, complete the short “Reciprocity Request Form” available at Career Strategy and linked below. The form asks for basic information necessary to process your request, including: school that you wish to visit, alternate school in case your first choice is not available, your contact information, date(s) you plan to visit, and date of last reciprocity request, if applicable.
Then, the host law school you wish to visit will either approve or deny the request in writing. If your request is approved, you will receive a letter from the host law school. That letter becomes your “passport” allowing you access as a visitor to that career office.
Please plan ahead and allow several weeks to arrange your reciprocity visit privileges. ֱ’s letter is only part of the process—the host law school must review and approve our request. While the process of obtaining your reciprocity privileges can sometimes be very speedy, it can also take several weeks depending on demands on limited staff at either law school. Because of competing deadlines and demands, reciprocity requests may take up to 2 weeks to process. Moreover, while we work hard to transmit our request to the law school you wish to visit, that law school may take 1 to 2 weeks to reply. Therefore, plan ahead and allow ample time to complete the process.
For more information about specific law schools and their reciprocity privilege policies, please check the NALP website at .
The Office of Career Strategy and Advancement may restrict or refuse reciprocity privileges to any student or graduate who misuses the facilities or services, or to anyone surpassing a reasonable number of requests during any given year.
The Reciprocity Request Form is available here.
Yes. Most law schools limit the number of visitors from the same school. In addition, most schools limit the number of weeks or months that the reciprocity privilege will be effective.
As a ֱ student or alumni, you generally may make no more than 3 reciprocity requests in any one calendar year. NOTE: virtually all law schools honor a “blackout period” (usually from August to December) during which no reciprocity requests will be processed or honored. So, it is important that you plan your requests wisely.
RECIPROCITY POLICY FOR NON-VILLANOVA VISITORS
The Office of Career Strategy and Advancement at ֱ University Charles Widger School of Law will provide reasonable access to resources for alumni and students of law schools outside the Philadelphia area on the terms outlined in the Policy document linked below:
- ֱ Visitor Policy (Updated May 2021)