One more reminder, I don’t know what your local situation is like, whether it is in rural areas or in all cities, because the courts have dispatched tribunals, like local township courts. If newcomers have just entered the industry and have no background, it is easier to send them to the courts in rural areas. Of course, being the president of the court is different. You have a lot of power, but it is hard for a newcomer. You have to sit in the countryside for three to five years and you are heartbroken. The People's Procuratorate is better than them in that it does not have any lower-level organizations. If the leader is dissatisfied with you, the most he can do is get a job in fringe departments such as prevention and surveillance, but these departments are idle and not easy to promote, haha, but if the LD takes a fancy to you, it is right to promote everywhere.
If it is a university of political science and law, it is best to be in a court or procuratorate or judicial bureau. To be honest, most people can do it, and the judicial examination will be in vain. Many are administrative jobs and have nothing to do with the legal profession. In addition, if your classmate’s family situation is good, it is recommended that he go to the procuratorate. There is little temptation, and people who pay bribes do not go to the prosecutor's office because they have no power. Judging from the local situation in recent years, the procuratorate rarely hears about the reasons why court presidents accept bribes. If the family is short of money, go to court. The courts have more money. Many prosecutors are the second generation of wealthy businessmen, and it is not uncommon for them to drive BMWs to work. The local procuratorate drove a BMW to work more than ten years ago, and later drove a Santana to meet with the boss. It is said that in other provinces (this was confirmed by him online, I didn’t see the car, so I don’t know if he was bragging), there are also clerks of the procuratorate driving handmade Lotus sports cars, because the procuratorate area is quite idle, but poor, but In economically developed places, the public prosecution and investigation departments are also busy vomiting blood all year round. As for the Anti-Corruption Bureau, outsiders think it is a popular department (I have to say that everyone takes it for granted, the knowledge is learned from TV and movies, it is purely their own YY). Insiders think it is a relatively popular department, but the reason is not because of leaving. Outside, it’s because there aren’t many cases, so you’re busy when you’re handling cases and free when you’re not handling cases, and no one will say you are (the occupational risk of anti-corruption can be said to be the highest in the procuratorate, as you directly face criminal suspects).
Of course, there are differences between courts. For example, in the court where the case is filed, no one will probably treat you to dinner all year round, and other courts will suffer from high blood pressure every day. There is a joke in our book: a court police officer wrote the reason for applying to be transferred to the execution court: the family is in financial difficulty, please forgive me, haha. The courts are busy. Basically, you can't escape two cases a week. After working for a long time, it’s actually quite tiring. Some colleagues said that they felt like vomiting when they saw the file. But if these two houses do not do business, they will become logistics and have no status. As for the Justice Bureau, most of us in both chambers despise it. Young people don't like to go. If there are no cases to handle, they will take the annual bar examination and manage the issuance of attorney certificates. Especially unenthusiastic. I feel like middle-aged people can be like this.
The above are either what friends around me said, or what I know, that’s all. I typed it word by word, not where I posted it. More authentic, haha.