Archive for April, 2018

PSJD Public Interest News Digest – April 27, 2018

Sam Halpert, NALP Director of Public Service Initiatives

Hello there, interested public! I wish I could tell you that NALP’s Annual Conference is my highlight for you this week–I think it’s certainly provided more than a few highlights for those of us lucky enough to be here. However, the news I want to call your attention to most is Secretary Session’s dramatic reversal of his position on legal support for immigrants, which he announced this week before a Senate oversight committee. (See Immigration, below.) In addition, you’ll likely be interested in a new report out of Delaware showing a dramatic return on investment for legal aid.

In general, it’s been an eventful week. Read on to see what I mean.

See you around,
Sam

Funding

Immigration

Access to Justice – Civil

Access to Justice – Criminal

Music Bonus!

Lauryn Hill, “To Zion”

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The Law Won’t Get Us Freedom, but Disability Justice Makes Us Better Lawyers, Better Advocates, and Better Humans

PSJD Pro Bono Publico Award Winner Lydia X.Z. Brown

By 2017 Pro Bono Publico Award Winner: Lydia X.Z. Brown| Northeastern University School of Law

Each year, NALP confers the PSJD Pro Bono Publico Award, recognizing the significant contributions that law students make to underserved populations, the public interest community, and legal education by performing pro bono work.

Lydia’s record advocating for individuals with disabilities, LGBTQ people, and people of color extends across the country and begins well before law school. We are honored to confer our 2017 award upon Lydia.


When I was in tenth grade, I was an awkward, openly autistic kid who wrote crime fiction and obsessed about historical and current injustices and mass atrocities. Within two months of starting the school year, I found myself across a table from a school administrator, falsely accused of planning a school shooting.

I was incredibly lucky, likely thanks to various privileges I hold in society, that I did not begin that year in handcuffs or with criminal charges pending. Other autistic and mentally ill people I’ve met, especially Black and Latinx autistic and mentally ill people, were not so lucky.

Our schools often function as the first site where multiply marginalized young people will be criminalized and shut out. We learn terrible lessons – that teachers can be bullies as much as classmates, that we will be punished if we fight back, that our bodies are not our own, that if we do not or cannot assimilate into whiteness or abledness then we will be easy targets for any form of violence up to and including death.

Advocacy for education reform, criminal justice reform, and gun violence prevention are all too frequently led by people who have never been and will never be directly impacted by the worst effects of ableism, classism, and racism that underlie and pervade the entirety of our educational, foster, and criminal punishment systems. Because law school is designed to admit only those who can excel according to capitalist standards meant for nondisabled, white, and moneyed individuals, and bar exams exist to further that elitism and exclusion, few attorneys have survived the worst effects of schools, institutions, or prisons.

I have learned that without a law degree, others can dismiss my perspectives as my personal experiences as a queer disabled person of color with no relevant expertise, education, or training. Once I graduate, I will be told that my perspective does not matter because if I have a law degree, I can’t really count as a disabled person since disabled people couldn’t possibly succeed in the legal profession.

In almost a decade of work for disability rights and disability justice (these are not the same), I have learned that every single person has something to contribute to the struggles against oppression in its many forms – even if that contribution is merely existing. My contributions are my own experiences along with my commitment to uplifting and supporting the work of others, especially those who are targeted or marginalized by forms of oppression I don’t face, in crafting truly intersectional approaches to organizing, advocacy, and activism.

When Kimberlé Williams Crenshaw, professor of law at Stanford, introduced the term intersectionality to public discourse with her paper Mapping the Margins: Intersectionality, Identity Politics, and Violence Against Women of Color, she intended its starting point to be recognizing unique and specific forms of oppression particularly targeting Black woman – later named misogynoir by Northeastern scholar Moya Bailey. Professor Crenshaw, Dr. Bailey, and others have expanded that work by deploying intersectionality as a framework for understanding compounded and particularized oppression as well as responses and challenges to it.

Intersectional approaches to gun violence, for example, require a deep understanding of racism and ableism. Most mass shooters have been white men, many with histories of domestic violence or other intimate partner abuse. Many have been openly white supremacist, including the attacker who targeted worshippers at a historical Black church in South Carolina, and the attacker who recently targeted students at a Florida high school. Yet prevailing media narratives have been of troubled individuals with histories of mental illness or speculation about autism – allowing whiteness to go unchecked and white supremacy and misogyny to remain unnamed, while ableism proliferates.

“Common sense” gun control measures, as advocated mostly by supposed “progressives,” rely almost entirely on racist and ableist measures. Increasing use of criminal background checks to screen potential gun buyers only relies on the exceedingly racist criminal punishment system to determine who has been appropriately convicted of crimes and should thus be denied a right allegedly meant for the people. Similarly, increased use of mental health screenings, and connections between mental health policy and gun policy, target those of us who seem weird, placing neurodivergent people of all kinds at heightened risk for dangerous surveillance and criminalization. (The conversation of whether the Second Amendment should or should not exist is a separate question; as written, gun ownership is considered a fundamental right alongside the rights to vote, marry, and travel between states. Erosion of one fundamental right based on spurious racial and disability biases raises the not so distant specter of further erosion of other fundamental rights, with less fanfare and sparse resistance.)

Disability rights demands that we craft policies that rely on documented histories, including criminal records, for specific factors like domestic violence, as a screening measure against gun ownership; demand policymakers to cease placing mental health reform and gun violence prevention in the same conversations, even when discussing suicide (which is not a violence problem, like small-scale or large-scale shootings targeting others); and incentivize voluntary and civilly administered gun buyback and temporary surrender programs that do not share data with entities in the criminal legal system or carry broader civil rights and civil liberties implications including those related to institutionalization.

In contrast, disability justice demands that we address the core societal causes of widespread gun violence (and other forms of mass violence that do not involve guns, including rape culture, restraints and seclusions in schools, and mass incarceration) – white supremacy, capitalism, ableism, and patriarchal misogyny (gender oppression and male dominance). Disability justice is inherently intersectional, and understands our work as intricately connected with all movements for liberation and justice, because disability is implicated in every form of oppression. Disability justice looks beyond and past the law for liberation – fighting for life, love, and freedom by building strong communities with survivor-centric transformative justice practices where violence is no longer normalized in any form, whether by individuals or the state. Unlike disability rights, which is ultimately about harm reduction and immediate survival, disability justice asks us to begin building the world and future we want now through crafting alternative systems within communities – looking to the history of radical resistance by the Black Panther Party for Self-Defense in everything from providing healthcare to defending Black communities against white supremacist forces (and similar work by the contemporary Food, Clothing, and Resistance Collective in D.C.); looking to the path-breaking work the Bay Area Transformative Justice Collective is doing in developing concrete accountability practices for redress, restitution, and reparations especially around sexual violence that do not rely on the criminal punishment system as a model for response to violence; or looking to the work of intellectual disability self-advocacy and peer/consumer/survivor respite, services, and support outside of conventional disability and mental health services systems led and controlled by nondisabled and neurotypical people.

As a disabled law student, advocate, and organizer, I have carried these principles with me into everything I do. Whether providing direct assistance and support to other marginalized people, testifying about legislative and regulatory proposals, or writing and speaking in various forums, I strive to use whatever resources I have to challenge injustice in all of its forms. I harbor no illusions that I can end systems of violence alone (for one, I believe in collective work for collective liberation), but I know that whatever I do I will always seek to amplify the work of others like me who know what it means to exist at the margins. I do not envision having clients as an attorney, but having collaborators and comrades, trusting in the wisdom and knowledge of those I work with every day to help lead us to the liberation we seek.

 

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PSJD Public Interest News Digest – April 20, 2018

Sam Halpert, NALP Director of Public Service Initiatives

Hello there, interested public! A number of major criminal justice-related legal changes are underway at both the federal and provincial levels up in Canada, detailed below. But the highlight of the news this week, for us, is our 2017 Pro Bono Publico Award Winner, Lydia X.Z. Brown, who received a feature article in Northeastern’s online publication. Lydia is a truly exceptional advocate, and the article does an excellent job illuminating the many reasons they became our 2017 PBP Award Winner. If you can’t make it to the Annual Conference next week, or you want an early glimpse of photos from Lydia’s award ceremony late last month, check out Northeastern’s coverage.

Hope to see you next week at NALP’s Annual Conference!
Sam

Student Debt

Immigration

Legal Technology

Access to Justice – Civil

Access to Justice – Criminal

Music Bonus!

Brass Against the Machine, “Freedom” (Beyoncé/Rage Against the Machine Mashup)

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Job’o’th’Week (Internship Edition)

Summer 2018 Legal Intern

Help Wanted

The Legal Aid Justice Center provides legal representation for low-income individuals in Virginia. Our mission is to serve those in our communities who have the least access to legal resources. The Legal Aid Justice Center is committed to providing a full range of services to our clients, including services our federal and state governments choose not to fund.

The Position

Legal Aid Justice Center (“LAJC”) seeks enthusiastic and committed legal interns to join our Falls Church (D.C. metro) office for the Summer 2018. The office serves as home base to LAJC’s Immigrant Advocacy Program, supporting low-income immigrants in their efforts to find justice and fair treatment.  In addition to representing clients with individual legal issues, we promote systemic reforms to reduce the abuse and exploitation of immigrants, and advocate for state and local policies that promote integration and reduce cooperation with federal immigration enforcement. We represent immigrants across Virginia, from the tomato fields of the Eastern Shore to restaurant kitchens in Charlottesville to luxury apartment construction sites in Arlington. Our work aims to end the mass detention and deportation of immigrants, with a special focus on child refugees fleeing violence and individuals and communities targeted for enforcement by overzealous federal immigration agents.

Ready for this new opportunity? Check it out here on PSJD.

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Eyes Wide Open

PSJD Pro Bono Publico Merit Distinction Finalist Brigitte Malatjalian

By Pro Bono Publico Award Merit Distinction Finalist: Brigitte Malatjalian| Southwestern Law School

Each year, NALP confers the PSJD Pro Bono Publico Award, recognizing the significant contributions that law students make to underserved populations, the public interest community, and legal education by performing pro bono work. In addition to the Award winner, we also occasionally recognize one or more Merit Distinction Finalists.

Brigitte’s commitment to serving the Armenian community within Greater Los Angeles has set a powerful example for both fellow students and practicing attorneys. Brigitte began her law school career volunteering with the Homelessness Prevention Law Project. She then spent two years working at the Los Angeles County Public Defender’s Office, where she gained a deeper understanding of systemic injustices and a powerful desire to help address them. Ultimately, this drive led her to form a partnership between Neighborhood Legal Services of Los Angeles and the Armenian Bar Association and start a pilot clinic providing free legal services in “Second Armenia” (Glendale California). When she graduates this Spring, she will leave behind a successful pilot; NLS and the Armenian Bar Association plan to continue the clinic. We are thrilled for this opportunity to call attention to Brigitte’s accomplishments.


Growing up, we face a moment when our haze of ignorant bliss drifts away and we understand, for the first time, that the world can be unjust. From this point, there are two paths. The first is to accept this harsh reality in search of the ignorant bliss that departed. The second is to reject it and take a stand on behalf of yourself and all others trapped in the cycle of despair. The strength to overcome gives you the power to help others.

My moment came through stigmatization. My ethnicity, my life choices, and my curiosity all contributed to the flame within me. Confusion led me to the streets. Anger led me to law school. Advocacy doesn’t necessarily entail a law degree, but it doesn’t hurt for credibility purposes. My goal was to address a community that was identified as the majority as an outcast. My intent was to help, to make sense of things.

A month into school I met with Professor Laura Cohen, the Director of Southwestern’s Public Service Program. Two-decades of educational turmoil made me pessimistic: Who did I think I was? A high-school drop-out – I didn’t belong here. But as I sat in her office, nothing planned, I spoke as fast as possible–thoughts and tears escaping from my head. I wanted to do everything. I wanted to get involved, I wanted to rebel, I wanted to educate. Professor Cohen embraced my goal as if it was her own. She offered me insight, perspective, and opportunities to get involved. I mean, a lot of opportunities.

Against the advice of many professors and academic advisors, I volunteered as much as I could. My first interaction with clients in my law-student capacity was at the Department of Public Social Services in Downtown with the Homeless Prevention Law Project. I was terrified at first–not by the clients but by my own personal barriers. Not too long ago, I was the one in the DPSS offices with my parents waiting for our name to be called. Now, I was the one calling names, tasked with interacting and assisting in a world I was all too familiar with. Around the same time, I discovered more amazing public interest opportunities. I started signing up for criminal clinics, one after another. From teaching high school students to helping adults expunge records – I wanted to know everything.

It wasn’t until my 2015 externship with the Los Angeles Public Defender’s Office that the puzzle pieces started coming together. One of the most important things I observed while there was during my time in lockup. I looked into the eyes of convicted felons now on probation, locked up for their 15th violation. I also looked into the eyes of scared 19 year olds on their first violation – who just wanted everything to go away and for me to call their mother. As I looked, I learned  never to jump to conclusions. It’s not always the case that the client was hiding from his probation officer because they did something wrong. It could also be because of a client’s lack of understanding about their duties under the court’s conditions, mentally abusive probation officers, or one-train, five-buse, one-mile-walk between home and the probation office. This is the real issue within our system, and although I’m starting to sing the tune of many public defenders – it’s an oppressive cycle.

Everyone wanted to go home, but many didn’t have a home to go to. Many didn’t have a dollar to their name family member or friend waiting in court, a significant other to write to, or even someone who would listen free from judgment. The most disturbing is that several clients communicated that he/she doesn’t know how to survive on the outside and would rather remain incarcerated. Clients were released, forced to comply with ridiculous conditions and reincarcerated due to, essentially, their inability to find stability.

We did this. Society did this. Society turned their back on individuals who needed someone, anyone, to extend a helping hand. Society punished, and after punishment – pointed their fingers and stigmatized. Through these experiences, and after assisting clients from all backgrounds – I had to do something. I had to start somewhere, so I decided to start at home. That’s when I decided to turn to my own community of Armenians with the intention of breaking down the barrier, starting the conversation, and proactively attempt to fix a broken system through clinical work.

Outcome

There are two things to note about the Armenian community. First, they are prideful people who are ashamed of making mistakes. Second, they believe that free does not equal quality. I was conscious about these challenges walking into this but firmly believe that with education, comfort, and consistency – acceptance will follow. I had tremendous support and backing by the Armenian Bar Association and members of the Armenian Law Students Association of Southwestern. My goal became our goal and after over 100-hours’ worth of telephone, physical, and virtual communication to set up a stable clinic, we finally launched. To this day, we have hosted four successful clinics. The services offered were Expungement, Proposition 47, and Proposition 64. Because of our efforts, we have been featured on Armenian newspapers, Glendale City Hall, and as a guest on Armenian TV.

Currently, I still continue to work with other pro-bono services and the Armenian Bar Association to plan and prepare future clinics. In addition, we are working on expanding our services to other areas of law. Clients not only have the opportunity for a new start, but the ability to share their stories. I’m not trying to change the world and although I would love to, I cannot force people to change their lives. What I will do is instill strength and perseverance. I will educate, and I will defend. No one should stand alone in the face of a system designed to stifle personal growth. Everyone should have the opportunity to share their journey and I believe survivors have an obligation to spread their fortitude.

 

 

 

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Job’o’th’Week (Experienced Edition)

Counsel, Liberty & National Security Program

Help Wanted

The Organization

The Brennan Center for Justice, at New York University School of Law is a non-partisan public policy and law institute that focuses on the fundamental issues of democracy and justice. Our work ranges from voting rights to campaign finance reform, from racial justice in criminal law to presidential power in the fight against terrorism. A singular institution – part think tank, part public interest law firm, part advocacy group – the Brennan Center combines scholarship, legislative and legal advocacy, and communications to win meaningful, measurable change in the public sector.

The Position

The Brennan Center’s Liberty and National Security Program works to advance effective national security policies that respect the rule of law and constitutional values. Our current program priorities include countering Islamophobic policies and rhetoric, ensuring that changes to immigration policy undertaken in the name of national security are rational and do not intrude into constitutionally protected spheres, evaluating the use of new surveillance technologies and developing safeguards against their abuse, and reining in overbroad emergency powers and government secrecy.

Position: The Brennan Center seeks an attorney for its Liberty and National Security Program. The position is based in the Brennan Center’s New York office and requires occasional travel to Washington, D.C. and other locations.

Ready to work for a wonderful organization? Check out the posting on PSJD.

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PSJD Public Interest News Digest – April 6, 2018

Sam Halpert, NALP Director of Public Service Initiatives

Hello there, interested public! There’s a fair amount of news this week, including some major new developments in law-school public-interest funding at Yale, Harvard, and in Ontario.

It was Louisiana that really caught my eye this week, though. Look at the two crim-law related sections below to read about how the state legislature is looking to slash funding for indigent defense and a local judge is calling into question a method by which some public defender offices have been trying to create alternative funding streams, in partnership with district attorneys.

Until next week,
Sam

Law School Public Interest Funding
& Student Loans

Hiring Trends

Immigration

Emerging Service Models

Access to Justice – Criminal

Criminal Justice Reform

Music Bonus!

William Shatner, “Common People”

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Job’o’th’Week (Entry-Level Edition)

2018 – 2019 PSJD Fellowship

Help Wanted

Now known as NALP, The National Association for Law Placement® was founded in 1971, during a period of rapid change in both the legal profession and legal education, in response to a perceived need by many law schools and legal employers for a common forum to discuss issues involving placement and recruitment.

NALP is dedicated to facilitating legal career counseling and planning, recruitment and retention, and the professional development of law students and lawyers.

NALP administers the PSJD (formerly PSLawNet) website.

The Position

The PSJD Fellow is the principal manager and administrator of the PSJD.org website. PSJD, a NALP initiative, catalogues thousands of job announcements for public service legal positions each year and curates a directory of civil society, government, and other public-service-oriented employers. The site also publishes a library of professional development and career search resources to assist jobseekers with legal training pursuing public service careers. Law students and alumni from hundreds of law schools in the United States and Canada rely on these materials to help them discover opportunities and make decisions about their public service careers. In addition, the Fellow gains non-profit management and administration experience and has the opportunity to write for publication, speak publicly, and build relationships with public interest organizations across the country.

The Fellow will work at NALP’s Washington, DC office–with some travel required (varying slightly, year-to-year).

Ready to lead a noble cause? Check out the posting on PSJD.

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Being on Tap, not on Top

Dayna Jones, Lewis & Clark Law School '18

By Pro Bono Publico Award Merit Distinction Finalist: Dayna Jones | Lewis & Clark Law School

Each year, NALP confers the PSJD Pro Bono Publico Award, recognizing the significant contributions that law students make to underserved populations, the public interest community, and legal education by performing pro bono work. In addition to the Award winner, we also occasionally recognize one or more Merit Distinction Finalists.


During her time at Lewis & Clark, Dayna has been relentlessly dedicated to environmental justice and Native American Civil Rights issues. Working at the intersection of these two concerns, Dayna helped the Chemawa Indian School launch its Peer Court program, served as Treasurer of the Native American Law Student Association. Her most significant contributions, though, are legislative: when the governor of Oregon convened a Cleaner Air Oregon process to review the state’s air toxic rules, Dayna provided support to OPAL Environmental Justice Oregon; as an intern for State Representative Karin Power, she convinced her boss to advocate for overhauling the state’s air toxics rules on the floor of the Oregon House. We are excited to see what she accomplishes next.


When I came to Portland to study law, I was advised to immediately learn about the systems of injustice in our community and the folks who are most disproportionately affected by these systems. It did not take me long to become overwhelmed with the issues of transportation inequity, housing loss as a result of gentrification, police brutality, toxic air, and juvenile incarceration that plague this beautiful city.

I began showing up at community meetings, volunteering with OPAL Environmental Justice Oregon (OPAL) and Law at the Margins, and collaborating with student groups to uplift the resilient work of frontline Native activists demanding environmental justice. During my second year of law school I also served as a volunteer legal intern for Representative Karin Power, a then-freshman legislator whose political platform has been tirelessly dedicated to achieving equity and a healthy environment for all of the diverse constituents of the state of Oregon. I also served as a volunteer Judge for Chemawa Indian School’s inaugural peer court program. In addition, I participated in a collaborative student reading group which paired Lewis & Clark law students with juvenile inmates housed at the MacLaren correctional institution.

If there were ten of me I would do ten times the work; the need for legal and administrative support is infinite. This infinite need is the result of America’s heteropatriarchial, white supremacist society which hoards financial and political access while disenfranchising low-income communities and communities of color. Investing in the organization, education, and power of environmental justice communities is exactly what I came to law school for. We are all connected and I know my children will never have a bright future so long as the children of others are being repressed, exploited, and underserved. I know I will never have a healthy environment as long as the environment of another is being polluted and poisoned. The fight for others is also a fight for myself, there are no lines to be drawn on where my existence ends and the existence of another begins.

Air quality has been a focal point of my pro bono work in Oregon. Despite its green appearance and reputation, Multnomah County has some of the worst air quality in the nation. The toxic air here is primarily a result of stationary air toxics, lax diesel emission regulations, and wood smoke. The neighborhood I live in has diesel pollution worse than 80% of the nation. The neighborhood of the OPAL office experiences an even worse toxic brew of diesel P.M, benzene, and arsenic. OPAL’s office is also located in one of the only majority-minority census tracts in Oregon and provides yet another testament to the fact that communities of color and low income offer suffer a disproportionate burden of pollution and its effects.

Air pollution in Oregon causes several different types of cancer, including skin cancer and lukemia, in addition to respiratory illness, and birth defects. Children, the elderly, and those with preexisting conditions are especially susceptible to the dangers of air pollution. During my work with OPAL, I participated in the Cleaner Air Oregon process. This process was convened by Governor Brown in reaction to a loophole in regulations that allowed a local glass facility to legally poison its neighbors for over forty years. To date, Cleaner Air Oregon is focused solely on stationary air toxic point sources. Despite this, I am hopeful that in the future zealous advocacy will encourage the Department of Environmental Quality, to include background considerations such as diesel into the risk assessment of a community. Participating in the Cleaner Air Oregon process has not been an easy lift for me, but it has been a very important one. Industry representatives are included in discussions and are paid to rebut and contradict all of the public health arguments made in support of the program. Local community groups simply do not have equal resources. Most of community representatives are not only unpaid, but being present in these discussions actually costs them money because of gas, time off work, babysitters, etc. This is one of the reasons pro bono work is so vital; the disproportionate representation that polluting industries have during regulatory processes designed to protect the public is staggering.

Advocating and lobbying for clean air should not be a sisyphean task, but the sheer power held by those who make a profit off of polluting others often makes it feel like it is. Providing pro bono and community service support to grassroots communities helps to shorten the gap in representation and resources and connects legal advocates to the frontline battles being fought in their community. After almost 2 years the Cleaner Air Oregon rulemaking process has finally concluded and I believe all of the unpaid hours advocates invested in this process have paid off with an introductory program we can all be proud of.

The fight for Cleaner Air Oregon is not over, though, as funding has to be approved by Oregon’s state legislature which is notorious for choosing business interests over public health. If funding is approved Oregon will be promoting the longevity of its citizens by transitioning from having some of the worst air in the nation to having some of the most health-protective regulations for stationary point source emissions. Diesel still needs to be addressed, and I hope that new students entering law school in Oregon hone in to the diesel crisis and make themselves available for pro bono support in the fight that is sure to come.

Now that I have graduated, I hope to make a career out of working toward environmental and social justice in communities most impacted by inequitable systems of representation. Regardless of where this career leads me, I know that pro bono work will be an integral part of my work. Pro bono work allows a person to be on tap, not on top, and provides a fulfilling contrast to the illusory ideas of success many lawyers find themselves surrounding in. True success is helping and loving others, striving to leave this environment better than we found it. I appreciate this nomination and recognition as I strive towards success in my personal and professional career. I hope that the work of PSJD students inspires others to challenge themselves to see how far they can go to make this world a better place for those around them.

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