The Federal Law Clerk Hiring Best Practices provide voluntary guidelines for judges when recruiting and hiring law clerks. Some of the key benefits and purposes of following these best practices are:
Q: What are the Federal Law Clerk Hiring Best Practices?
A: The Federal Law Clerk Hiring Best Practices (Best Practices) are voluntary guidelines for all federal judges, including circuit judges, district judges, bankruptcy judges, and magistrate judges.  The Best Practices do not involve Supreme Court Justices.
Q: How can applicants determine whether a judge has a clerkship vacancy or if a judge is currently recruiting law clerks?
A: OSCAR allows prospective law clerk applicants to search a national database of federal law clerk vacancies.  All federal judges are encouraged to list their vacancies on the site and indicate if they do not have a vacancy and are not accepting applications.  Users may obtain a list of OSCAR participating judges and their application methods.  The OSCAR judge profile lists a judge’s hiring practices and preferences, including whether or not the judge is currently recruiting law clerks. 
Q: When is the law clerk hiring period?
A: There is a new Law Clerk Hiring Plan to which a substantial number of judges adhere, although each judge determines his or her own recruitment and hiring schedule, and judges in a court may collectively choose to conduct interviews during an agreed-upon period.
Q: May judges hire law students or law graduates for law clerk positions for years beyond the next immediate court term?
A: Yes.  Judges can post future positions in OSCAR and both law school students and law graduates can apply to such positions. 
Q: When  can a judge make an offer to an applicant and how much time does an applicant  have to respond to an offer?
 A:  Judges may offer positions once  interviews are permitted under the  Hiring Plan.  Judges individually  decide their clerkship offer’s  terms.  However, judges are encouraged not  to require an applicant to  accept an offer immediately without reasonable time  to weigh it against  other viable options that remain open to the  applicant.  The Hiring Plan provides that judges will keep offers open at least 24 hours. This does not  prohibit an applicant from accepting an offer on  the spot if she or he  so chooses.  In addition, law schools are encouraged  to remind their  students that they need not accept the first offer that they  receive;  rather, applicants should be counseled to weigh any offer against  other  viable options that remain open to them.