PSJD Public Interest News Digest – July 17, 2020

Sam Halpert, NALP Director of Public Service Initiatives

Photo: Harris and Ewing Collection, Library of Congress

Interested public. The news continues to lie thickly around us, particularly in the areas of justice reform and the debate around how to responsibly reopen physical courts. There’s a lot of material this week so I’ll keep my summary brief. I do want, however, to call attention to yesterday’s edition of PSJD’s Jobs’o’th’Week. We’ve heard that people want more job highlights from PSJD so my colleague Brittany Swett has expanded her weekly feature to include additional positions that have stood out as she manages our job database on an ongoing basis.

Take care of one another,

Sam

Editor’s Choice(s)

COVID-19, Remote Legal Practice, & Decarceration

Rule of Law & Voting Rights

Legal Technology

Non-Profit & Gov’t Management & Hiring

Immigration, Refugee, & Citizenship Issues

Student Loans & Student Debt

Access to Justice – Civil & Economic

Criminal Justice Reform

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Jobs’o’th’Week (Internship Edition)

Photo: Brenda Gottesman – CC License

From now on, we’re changing things up with this series! In an effort to highlight more opportunities, we will be briefly mentioning several new opportunities on PSJD. Each week, the positions highlighted will likely have a common theme, such as the same job type, hiring employer, or legal practice area.

To kick things off, we’re focusing on fall internships working on racial justice issues with five different organizations. Although these organizations are located across the country, most are hiring interns to work remotely!

American Civil Liberties Union of Louisiana (New Orleans, LA)

The ACLU of Louisiana is devoted to the protection of civil rights and civil liberties from government abuse and overreach. The ACLU seeks fall externs to work on its newest initiative “Just Lab: Putting Racist Policing on Trial.” As a team member on this project, externs will process case intakes, draft complaints for litigation, and help implement the Initiative’s restorative justice platform.

Follow this link to learn more. **Remote work may be a possibility.

Shriver Center on Poverty Law (Chicago, IL)

The Shriver Center on Poverty Law litigates, advocates, and educates to promote economic and racial justice. Their work strives for a future free from racism, poverty, and the interlocking systems that fuel these inequities. The Shriver Center seeks legal interns to join the Advocacy Team. Interns will provide research and writing to support litigation and policy efforts.

Follow this link to learn more. **Remote work required.

Advancement Project (Washington, DC)

The mission of the Advancement Project is to eliminate structural racism and ensure power is given to people of color. Their work focuses on voting rights, immigrant justice, mass incarceration and policing, and the school-to-prison pipeline. The Advancement Project seeks interns committed to racial justice and civil rights issues. Interns will contribute research and writing to attorneys, organizations, and communications strategists.

Follow this link to learn more.

The Center for HIV Law and Policy (Brooklyn, NY)

The Center for HIV Law and Policy (CHLP) is a national resource and strategy center for people with HIV and their advocates. By providing high-quality legal and policy materials in an online database, CHLP supports and advances initiatives that are grounded in social justice, science, and public health. CHLP seeks legal interns to contribute legal research and writing to various projects including the Positive Justice Project, Teen SENSE, the Sexual Health Youth Advocacy Coalition, and the HIV Policy Resource Bank.

Follow this link to learn more. **Remote work may be a possibility.

Campaign for the Fair Sentencing of Youth (Washington, DC)

The Campaign for the Fair Sentencing of Youth (CFSY) is a coalition and clearinghouse that coordinates, develops, and supports efforts to implement fair and age-appropriate sentences for youth. CFSY seeks legal interns to support litigation and policy advocacy efforts. Interns will contribute research and writing on topics such as parole eligibility for youth, mitigating sentencing factors, and challenges presented in proposed state legislation.

Follow this link to learn more. **Remote work may be a possibility.

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PSJD Public Interest News Digest – July 10, 2020

Sam Halpert, NALP Director of Public Service Initiatives

Photo: Harris and Ewing Collection, Library of Congress

Interested public. Interesting times continue to lay news on thickly–especially concerning criminal justice reform. Other blockbuster stories this week include new rules from the Trump Administration regarding the status of foreign students attending US universities (and universities’ response), mounting calls from the law class of 2020 for states to make changes to their licensure policies, and a new policy document from the Biden campaign reflecting a Biden/Sanders compromise position on student debt.

Take care of one another,

Sams

Editor’s Choice(s)

COVID-19 & Remote Legal Practice

Rule of Law

Legal Technology

Non-Profit & Gov’t Management & Hiring

Immigration, Refugee, & Citizenship Issues

Student Loans & Student Debt

Access to Justice – Civil & Economic

Access to Justice: Criminal

Criminal Justice Reform

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PSJD Public Interest News Digest – July 2, 2020

Sam Halpert, NALP Director of Public Service Initiatives

Photo: Harris and Ewing Collection, Library of Congress

Interested public. The digest is back this week with another bursting edition; thanks for bearing with me. Chicago Law published a new study on human rights violations in use-of-force regulations for police departments in cities across the United States, while law students in NY, NJ, and CT took action to voice their perspective on racial justice issues within their campuses. The US Supreme Court made the Director of the CFPB easier for the President to remove, while the House Oversight and Reform Committee took up the question of whether the Executive Branch lied to Congress about the legality of its proposal to eliminate the OMB and merge its remainder into the GSA. Attorneys have begun grappling with the beginnings of an eviction crisis as state moratoria on evictions come to a close, the ACLU in both Arizona and Michigan took steps to make prosecutors more accountable for misconduct, and attorneys in Las Vegas began their defense of Legal Observers arrested during recent protests.

As usual, you can find these stories and many others below.

Take care of one another,

Sam

Editor’s Choices:

COVID-19 & Remote Legal Practice

Immigration, Refugee, & Citizenship Issues

Non-Profit & Gov’t Management & Hiring

Student Loans & Student Debt

Access to Justice – Civil

Access to Justice – Criminal

Decarceration

Criminal Justice Reform

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Job’o’th’Week (Fellowship Edition)

Photo: Brenda Gottesman – CC License

Project-Based Fellowships

The summer is the best time to begin searching for project-based fellowship opportunities. Project-based fellowships provide recent graduates with the chance to design a program to address an unmet legal need. Using funding from an external source, fellows partner with a host organization to implement their program. Because there is both a funding organization and a host organization, the process for securing a project-based fellowship requires separate applications to the host and funding organizations.

Skadden and Equal Justice Works are two of the largest national funding sources for project-based fellowships. And both are accepting project proposals!

Because both of these organizations have early fall deadlines, host organizations are seeking fellowship candidates now! This gives the host organizations time to find the right candidates and help you design a project proposal to submit for funding.

To look for organizations that are seeking to host and fund fellows for project-based fellowships, use this filtered search.

(NOTE: There are funding sources other than Equal Justice Works and Skadden, so be on the lookout for those as well!)

In the Resource Center, you can also use the Fellowship Calendar to browse project-based fellowship opportunities in a calendar view, sorted by either post date or application deadline. Click here for a filtered view of the calendar.

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PSJD Public Interest News Digest – June 19, 2020

Sam Halpert, NALP Director of Public Service Initiatives

Photo: Harris and Ewing Collection, Library of Congress

Interested public. Hope today goes well for you, wherever you are. Big stories this week include two decisions from the U.S. Supreme Court: the 1964 civil rights act protects gay, lesbian, and transgender employees from discrimination based on sex, and the Trump Administration’s attempt to eliminate the DACA program was improper under the Administrative Procedures Act. (Although the Court also declined cert. on many cases before it concerning the doctrine of qualified immunity.) Meanwhile, more district attorneys across the United States announced they will not prosecute protesters arrested in recent weeks. In New York NY, police responded by refusing to work with the DAs offices that issued such statements. Meanwhile, in other news, Washington State has discontinued its Limited License Legal Technicians program and Congress is once again criticizing Secretary DeVos’ handling of student loans.

These stories and more are in the links below.

Take care of one another,

Sam

Editor’s Choice

Public Defense

Immigration, Refugee, & Citizenship

Legal Practice & COVID-19

Non-Profit & Gov’t Managment & Hiring

Student Loans & Student Debt

Legal Technology

Access to Justice – Civil

Access to Justice – Criminal

Criminal Justice Reform

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Job’o’th’Week (All Experience Levels Edition)

The Organization

Photo: Brenda Gottesman – CC License

Kids in Need of Defense (KIND) is a national organization that advocates for the rights of unaccompanied migrant and refugee children. Employees and partners of KIND recognize that the needs of unaccompanied migrant children are multi-faceted so they use a holistic strategy for addressing these needs. KIND’s services include pro bono legal representation, policy and advocacy for fair treatment, and mental and social services. KIND has successfully been referred more than 20,000 children, trained over 50,000 participants on how to represent children, and hosted over 644 legal partners.

The Positions

KIND seeks applicants with all levels of experience to fill intern, paralegal, and attorney positions in their offices across the country.

For each of these positions, the ideal candidates will have experience with immigration law, experience working with children, cross-cultural communication skills, and fluency in Spanish.

For more information about openings with KIND, see KIND’s profile on PSJD: https://www.psjd.org/org?orgid=108087

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PSJD Public Interest News Digest – June 12, 2020

Sam Halpert, NALP Director of Public Service Initiatives

Photo: Harris and Ewing Collection, Library of Congress

Interested public. Major stories this week follow on the heels of last week’s events–many of which are ongoing. In particular, Public Defenders across the United States marched for racial justice this week. In the world of legal technology, the public learned more about the technological tools law enforcement has brought to bear against protesters while several major tech companies made commitments to refrain from selling specific technologies to law enforcement. Journalists continued their efforts to catalog the various efforts for pro bono assistance springing up in communities across the United States.

These stories and more are in the links below.

Take care of one another,

Sam

Editor’s Choice: Systemic Racism & the Unauthorized Practice of Law

Secret Police

Protest Responses

Defenders

Pro Bono Representation

Class Actions

Prosecutors

Legal Technology

Immigration, Refugee, and Citizenship

Student Loans

COVID-19 & Decarceration

Access to Justice – Civil

Access to Justice – Criminal

Criminal Justice Reform

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Job’o’th’Week (Fellowship Edition)

Photo: Brenda Gottesman – CC License

The Organization

A Better Balance is a national legal advocacy organization promoting fairness in the workplace to help workers take care of themselves and their families without sacrificing their economic security. A Better Balance employees achieve their goals through policy work, direct legal services, strategic litigation, and public education. Thus far, A Better Balance has achieved victories in equal pay, breastfeeding accommodations, pregnancy and caregiver protections, protection for diverse families, and much more. Responding to the COVID-19 pandemic, A Better Balance attorneys and staff are working to strengthen emergency and permanent policy procedures, providing direct legal services, and conducting Know Your Rights public education.

The Position

A Better Balance seeks an entry-level lawyer passionate about the rights of women, families, and caregivers to work as a Legal Fellow for at least one year. The Fellow will be responsible for managing A Better Balance’s free and confidential legal helpline to provide assistance to Spanish- and English-speaking low-wage workers. The Fellow will also provide litigation support and create public education materials in Spanish and English.

The ideal candidate will be Spanish-English bilingual, have experience in providing direct legal services, and be committed to work and family law and advocacy for low-income individuals.

See the full post on PSJD: https://www.psjd.org/job?OppID=101771

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PSJD Public Interest News Digest – June 5, 2020

Sam Halpert, NALP Director of Public Service Initiatives

Photo: Harris and Ewing Collection, Library of Congress

Interested public. I compile this digest each week (well, most weeks) to bring you public interest law news. This week, the news is that public protests and the forces of the law are in perilous tension. After Minneapolis law enforcement slowly murdered a Black man in their custody in broad daylight and in full view of multiple witnesses and cameras, people across the United States have been moved to protest against systemic racial oppression. Law enforcement officers have responded with brutal violence while many mayors demonstrated bipartisan disinterest in police accountability. The President of the United States has placed the District of Columbia under military occupation and threatened sovereign U.S. states with similar treatment rather than consider meaningful reforms. Retired and serving members of military leadership have begun to remind soldiers of their Constitutional oaths while the U.S. Attorney General deploys heavily-armed, unmarked forces in downtown DC.

The legal community, in response, has begun bringing lawsuits. Lawyers across the country have committed to serving protestors pro bono. The Supreme Court of the United States weighed whether to revisit the doctrine of “qualified immunity” for law enforcement. The Supreme Court of Washington issued a challenge to the legal community:

As lawyers and members of the bar, we must recognize the harms that are caused when meritorious claims go unaddressed due to systemic inequities or the lack of financial, personal, or systemic support. And we must also recognize that this is not how a justice system must operate. Too often in the legal profession, we feel bound by tradition and the way things have “always” been. We must remember that even the most venerable precedent must be struck down when it is incorrect and harmful. The systemic oppression of black Americans is not merely incorrect and harmful; it is shameful and deadly.

Finally, as the New York Attorney General says “she’s prepared to legally challenge President Donald Trump’s threat to send in the military”, at least one legal commentator (Elie Mystal of the Nation) questioned the relevance of a legal response to a military encounter:
If the military is told to occupy New York City or Los Angeles, they’ll go. If they’re told to secure the streets, in violation of the constitutional right to peaceable assembly, they’ll do it. If they’re told to round up and arrest protesters, or members of the press, they’ll do it. They won’t even have to open fire on a crowd of unarmed civilians—the threat that one of them might is more than enough to vitiate any pretense of constitutional democracy…People have to think [] about how to stop a man who is above the law, using all the peaceful tools (always the peaceful tools) available to us.

These stories are in the links below.

Take care of one another,

Sam

The President of the United States is not a dictator, and President Trump does not and will not dominate New York state. In fact, the president does not have the right to unilaterally deploy U.S. military across American states[.] We respect and will guard the right to peaceful protest, and my office will review any federal action with an eye toward protecting our state’s rights. Rest assured: We will not hesitate to go to court to protect our constitutional rights during this time and well into the future.

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