For Maria Chen, the job offer felt impossible a decade ago. A single mother in Kamloops, hundreds of kilometres from the nearest large firm. She had assumed a legal career was something that happened to other people. It was for people who could afford to uproot their lives and move to Vancouver or Toronto for three years of school… And of course, a summer of unpaid clerking.

She enrolled in an online Juris Doctor program instead. But she also kept her day job, and clerked remotely for a law firm she has still never visited in person.

Her path would have been unrecognizable to the generation of lawyers before her. For decades, the route into the profession ran through a single, rigid channel… A campus law school, an articling position secured through proximity and connections, and a working life built around a physical office and the assumption that everyone would be in it.

That channel still exists. It is no longer the only one.

Remote work, digital collaboration tools and shifting expectations about where work happens have reshaped how lawyers are trained and how they practise. What began as an emergency measure during the pandemic has hardened into something more permanent. It has reached law schools, employers and the firms that hire new graduates.

The result is a profession that increasingly looks nothing like the one earlier generations entered.

Pursue a Juris Doctor without abandoning a salary

The change starts with legal education itself. Aspiring lawyers are weighing cost, access and flexibility more heavily than ever when deciding how to earn a degree. Institutions have responded by expanding hybrid and fully online programs. A working professional with family obligations can now pursue a Juris Doctor without abandoning a salary or relocating a household.

According to Cleveland State University, some of these programs deliver coursework entirely online while preserving in-person contact through residential weekends. It’s a hybrid model designed to keep students connected without tethering them to a campus.

The shift in education tracks a broader change in the workplace. The International Bar Association has described the emergence of what it calls the “hybrid legal function.” It is where in-house counsel, alternative legal service providers and technology-driven systems operate together under far more flexible arrangements than the profession once tolerated. Cost pressure is driving much of it… In one IBA survey, roughly 42 per cent of law firms said they had been asked to cut costs over the prior year.

The geography of early-career work has loosened too. Internships and clerkships were once gated by location. It was only available to students who already lived in a major legal market… Or those who could afford to relocate for a summer. Many organizations now offer remote or partially remote placements. They let students contribute to research, contract review and case preparation from anywhere. Law firms that were once unreachable for a student in a small city are now a video call away.

Become a lawyer remotely

Technology has moved from the margins of legal training to its centre. Cloud document systems, e-discovery platforms, AI-assisted research and virtual hearings are now routine across much of the profession, and graduates are expected to understand not only legal doctrine but the systems that run a modern practice.

A Thomson Reuters report on in-house lawyers found that hybrid arrangements are now treated as a long-term reality rather than a temporary accommodation, while flagging the confidentiality and collaboration risks that come with them.

There is just one problem: the model is far from solved.

Mentorship is the sharpest concern. Junior lawyers have always learned by watching, by the overheard hallway conversation and the unscripted minutes after a meeting. Those moments are hard to manufacture over video. Research on remote onboarding suggests that employees who start their careers entirely at a distance can struggle to build attachment to an organization, raising the odds they leave early.

The risks are practical as well. Lawyers handle confidential material, and distributed teams strain both cybersecurity and the simple consistency of communication across time zones.

Even so, the profession keeps adapting. Many law firms are settling on hybrid structures that pair remote flexibility with periodic in-person collaboration, an attempt to keep the access without losing the apprenticeship.

The path into law is no longer tied to a single model of where to study or where to work. What looked like a temporary disruption has become a lasting reshaping of how lawyers are made.

Al Vigier is the founder and CEO of Caseway, a Vancouver automation company building structured, audit-ready decision and data infrastructure for enterprises and government. He is also the founder of Jusu, a wellness brand he scaled to roughly 60,000 customers before exiting, then recently reacquired. Earlier in his career, Al practised divorce law and served seven years in the Canadian Army. He sat on the board of The Last Post Fund, a veteran nonprofit, for ten years.

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