Skip to main content

This job has expired

National Legal Affairs Reporter, The Wall Street Journal - NY

Employer
Dow Jones
Location
New York
Salary
$DoE
Closing date
22 Nov 2019

View more

Job Details

The Wall Street Journal is looking for an experienced reporter to cover law and legal affairs throughout the U.S.

The position, based in New York, affords wide latitude for reporters both to go broad-and deep-on a variety of topics.

Previous coverage areas for this job have included intellectual property; the federal and state judiciaries; the death penalty and criminal justice; guns and gun litigation; familiy law (divorce, marriage, reproductive rights); and U.S. constitutional law.

The reporter for this high-profile assignment needs to love big, fast-breaking news stories, as well as deeply reported narratives and enterprise journalism.

The ideal candidate will have an interest and keen ability to identify legal topics of national importance and write about them with authority and clarity.

The ideal candidate will be expected to break news on a regular basis, and, as importantly, drive enterprise stories on the most essential legal topics, especially those having an outsize impact on individuals and institutions throughout the U.S.

The job consistently intersects with topics and coverage areas throughout the newsroom, from politics to sports, financial regulation to the First Amendment, corruption to civil litigation.

The reporter should be an eager collaborator; she or he will frequently be called upon to work with colleagues and bureaus from across coverage areas at the Journal.

A law degree is not required, nor is any previous legal-reporting experience. But the ideal candidate should know the basics of how the legal and court systems operate, and be able to quickly get up to speed on any legal topic, as required.

Reporters should be very digitally-minded and smart in thinking about how to ride a news story online. At least five years of reporting experience is preferred.

Click 'APPLY' now.

Dow Jones, Making Careers Newsworthy

All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, national origin, protected veteran status, or disability status. EEO/AA/M/F/Disabled/Vets.

Dow Jones is committed to providing reasonable accommodation for qualified individuals with disabilities, in our job application and/or interview process.

If you need assistance or accommodation in completing your application, due to a disability, please reach out to us at TalentResourceTeam@dowjones.com. Please put "Reasonable Accommodation" in the subject line.

About Us

The Wall Street Journal is a global news organization that provides leading news, information, commentary and analysis. The Wall Street Journal engages readers across print, digital, mobile, social, and video.

Building on its heritage as the preeminent source of global business and financial news, the Journal includes coverage of U.S. and world news, politics, arts, culture, lifestyle, sports, and health. It holds 38 Pulitzer Prizes for outstanding journalism.

The Wall Street Journal is published by Dow Jones, a division of News Corp (NASDAQ: NWS, NWSA; ASX: NWS, NWSLV).

Company

We break stories, influence ideas, and advance business intelligence and cultural interest.

We expose the events that turn markets, the digital breakthroughs that transform art, the demand that drives invention, as well as the political and societal passing moments and lasting consequences.

We are the people of Dow Jones. From different fields, backgrounds and viewpoints we invite you to join us.

Examine the world and bring it to others.

Company info
Website

Get job alerts

Create a job alert and receive personalised job recommendations straight to your inbox.

Create alert