osgoode hall career services
where you areWelcome

The Career Services Office of Osgoode Hall Law School of York University, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, presents programs and provides services throughout the year to assist current students and alumni in defining and achieving their short-term and long-term career goals. Osgoode Hall Law School graduates are successfully practising in all areas of law across Canada and the United States as well as pursuing a variety of alternative non-legal career paths.

The Career Services Office provides individual career coaching, programs and workshops, and offers extensive resources and reference materials. We also provide students with assistance in their search for both summer and articling positions. We maintain job postings of part-time, full-time, summer, articling, and internship positions on this website, as well as information on law firms, government offices, corporate legal departments and other legal and non-legal career opportunities for law graduates.

The Career Services Office also provides basic information about Bar Admission requirements in Ontario as well as other provinces.

osgoode hall, career services

Give Us Feedback!
The Career Services Office is always seeking ways to improve the delivery of our services to the Osgoode student body.

If you have any suggestions on how we can improve, please email us.

send us feedback!

Please Note – Career Services Office memos and checklists, as well as other publications, including this website, are provided for informational purposes only – they are not substitutes for reviewing information published by relevant authorities or governing bodies.  Further, specific content contained in these materials such as firm names and contact information, as well as, dates and other temporal specific information may no longer be valid after the date of publication as these specifics change frequently.  Please ensure that you check current resources, including the job posting section of the CSO website, when making applications to firms/offices.
 
york university
© Osgoode ITS 2003, Osgoode Hall Law School