As my three weeks ended, I sat down to write my .I realized that being a judge or an assistant isn't just about knowing the Civil Code or Criminal Code ; it’s about patience and organizational stamina. I successfully applied my theoretical knowledge from university to real-world procedural deadlines.
I arrived at the heavy wooden doors of the District Court at 8:50 AM, clutching my assignment folder. My report officially starts here: the . I met my supervisor, a federal judge whose office was piled high with "volumes" of criminal and civil cases.
This is the story of a law student’s internship (praktika) at a District Court ( Rajonny Sud ), following the typical structure of an internship report ( otchet ).
The middle of my report is the , where the real work happened.
: My supervisor let me draft "light" documents—notifications for hearings, subpoenas, and even a draft for a simple civil order. I learned that in law, a missed comma can change a sentence.
: I spent hours stitching together case files (literally, with a needle and thread) and labeling pages. It sounds tedious, but it’s how you learn the anatomy of a lawsuit.