I don't know if I would call it AA, but there is an effort, I hear, to gain some diversity in big law.It's mostly about image. From what I understand clients are asking for more diverse attorneys. It makes the big names like Walmart seem more compassionate, I guess ("See, we like minorities, our attorneys are Black."
Anyway, if anyone wants to hire a person with a diverse background, pm me
Yes, I know this for a fact, because my current employer (a very large, prestigious financial firm) has a diversity policy and, like many other big clients, is putting pressure on the law firms they use--actually given them ultimatums--about increasing diversity...or else. My employer is a huge amount of business, and no law firm would want to lose that, even if that means--gasp!--making more women and minorities partners.
I think this is a GOOD thing. Like MoniLi said, making a bigger effort to find and recruit qualified minorities is not the same thing as giving someone who is unqualified the job just because they're a minority. If it means giving the URM candidate the job over a similarly qualified white candidate because you want to increase diversity, I don't see any problem with that, either.
Where I think many law firms still need to have a bit of AA is in the non-golfing community. I refuse to learn how to play golf to get ahead in my career. Then again, I don't want Biglaw
