September 21, 2011 at 1:31 pm
· Filed under Career Resources, Public Interest Jobs
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September 20, 2011 at 3:23 pm
· Filed under News and Developments, Uncategorized
By Kristen Pavón
D.C. attorney Marie-Therese Connolly received a MacArthur Foundation fellowship for her exceptional work as Appleseed’s Life Long Justice Initiative founder and director.
The MacArthur Foundation, one of the nation’s largest independent foundations, supports national and international people and institutions committed to building a more just, verdant, and peaceful world.
Connolly’s Life Long Justice Initiative with Appleseed, a nonprofit network of public interest justice centers in the U.S. and Mexico, will focus on “creating an integrated national advocacy effort to prevent, detect, and intervene in the mistreatment of the elderly and secure reauthorization of key federal legislation.”
The MacArthur Foundation fellow has devoted her career to fighting elder abuse. She has served as the Department of Justice’s Elder Justice and Nursing Home Initiative director, where she developed legal theories and litigation strategies to prosecute elder abuse and neglect cases.
Connolly is a leading voice in the elder rights arena and with the MacArthur Foundation’s five-year award, she will be able to continue her meritorious efforts.
Learn more about Life Long Justice here.












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September 20, 2011 at 2:32 pm
· Filed under News and Developments, The Legal Industry and Economy, Uncategorized
By Andrea Nehorayoff
People are just sick over our foreclosure crisis. No really, foreclosures are literally making people sick. A study based on new research relating health problems to foreclosures states that the two are directly correlated.
According to two university researchers, “an increase of 100 foreclosures corresponded to a 7.2% rise in emergency room visits and hospitalizations for hypertension, and an 8.1% increase for diabetes, among people aged 20 to 49,” based on statistics since 2005 in Arizona, Florida, New Jersey, and California. These high-foreclosure areas are also faced with large populations of unemployed, underemployed and uninsured. People are driving themselves sick and they need help!
These numbers are flat-out scary. One solution to this problem is to help people find ways to avoid financial duress and keep their homes. Legal aid is a viable option for people facing foreclosure.
A Staten Island resident was able to receive a loan modification and stop her from losing her home altogether with the help of Staten Island Legal Services. Solutions like this one can help relieve the stress-related ailments—- respiratory problems, pneumonia, chest pain, shortness of breath and suicidal thoughts– associated with financial hardships, but by no means is a permanent one. We need to fix this problem. The research might only cover four states, but the statistics could be just as bad, or even worse, in other states.
What are your ideas about how attorneys can help alleviate the stress that foreclosures create?
Andrea, a newbie PSLawNet Blog contributor, is a Project Assistant at NALP. She is a senior at The George Washington University pursuing a degree in Political Science. Prior to joining NALP, Andrea’s political interests had her working for a variety of New York State political campaigns, including Governor Paterson’s reelection campaign, Kathleen Rice for NYS Attorney General, candidates for state senate, congressmen for reelection and the New York State Democratic Committee. She can be reached at anehorayoff@nalp.org.












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September 20, 2011 at 1:28 pm
· Filed under Career Resources, Public Interest Jobs, Uncategorized
Here’s an opportunity to represent the university that boasts 76 Nobel Prize winners and 35 National Medal of Science recipients! Counsel in the Office of the General Counsel (OGC) will advise and represent MIT on legal issues related to research, faculty, students, health and safety, and privacy issues. 
MIT’s counsel will also streamline the school’s contracting processes by creating systems, training, and procedures that empower varied units to responsibly draft, negotiate, and enter into a variety of contracts involving copyright, software, licensing, confidentiality, and data protection; and support units in their contracting activities and handle unusual, complex contracts; provide legal, tactical, and strategic advice on policies, best practices, and education.
To learn more about the position and apply, check out the listing at PSLawNet












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September 20, 2011 at 12:24 pm
· Filed under News and Developments, Uncategorized
By Kristen Pavón
Murrow Award-winning legal analyst and commentator Andrew Cohen wrote an interesting op-ed for The Atlantic that gets to the heart of the controversial death penalty topic and cautions that we are close to a turning point on capital punishment.
In the modern era of capital punishment — since the Supreme Court’s decision in Gregg v. Georgia — three main camps have emerged. First, there are those who are for the death penalty all the way; the ones who lament the time and money it takes from trial to execution. Then, there are those who are against capital punishment all the way; the ones who believe that the state should never be in the business of killing its own citizens. And between the two solitudes, there is a vast middle; those who believe that there is a place for the death penalty, but only if it can be administered fairly and accurately, free from the sort of arbitrary and capricious decision-making that pushed the justices to do away with it in the first place in 1972 in Furman v. Georgia.
Cohen also chronicles our push-pull-tug relationship with capital punishment over the last few decades and tackles questions like “How fair does his [Duane Edward Buck] legal treatment really need to be?”
Last week, when Duane Buck’s case was on America’s docket, the most-asked questions (of me, anyway) were (to paraphrase): Why should I care about the procedural technicalities of this guy’s sentencing case when his guilt is not in doubt? Since he’s guilty of murder, how fair does his legal treatment really need to be? People of all political stripes asked the same questions. For them, Buck’s guilt evidently vitiated any need for an honest evaluation of the manner in which he was sentenced to death. Texas in 2000 conceded that Buck’s trial was impermissibly unfair? The other men similarly situated got their new trials? Who cares. The guy did it. He is getting more justice than he gave to his victims.
That last part is true. Of course, defendants like Duane Buck get more justice than their victims. That’s the whole point of our criminal justice system — and of the rule of law. That’s why we outlaw lynching, why angry mobs can’t storm jailhouses, and why we have judges. It’s why we have a Constitution. In America, we aim to give the guilty more justice than they deserve. We do so because of how that reflects upon us, not upon how it reflects upon the guilty. And when we fail to do so it says more about us than it does about the condemned. Although Let’s look just at Texas, again, for a moment.
It’s definitely a must-read piece. Check it out here.












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September 20, 2011 at 10:22 am
· Filed under News and Developments, The Legal Industry and Economy, Uncategorized
By Kristen Pavón
In the midst of an access-to-justice crisis (as a result of the country’s economic situation, funding cuts at every turn and sky-high poverty rates), it’s easy to forget about the needs of organizations trying to do good work in their communities when thousands of low-income individuals are in dire need of effective representation.
However, many new or small non-profits, especially in this climate, do not have the resources to obtain effective legal representation and advice. Florida Legal Services, Inc. (FLS) recognized this need and is coordinating a statewide initiative to bring non-profits and transactional attorneys together for pro bono legal clinics.
On Oct. 6 at Florida Coastal School of Law, representatives of local nonprofit organizations will have the opportunity to meet one-to-one with attorneys from the Florida Bar Business Law Section who can provide legal guidance and direction for their organizations.
With sound legal advice, non-profits will be able to continuing serving their communities and providing essential services.
If you’re a Florida non-profit organization and are interested in setting up an appointment with an attorney, contact FLS Pro Bono Director Sheila Meehan at sheila@floridalegal.org.
For more information about the program, click here.
What do you think about this project? Would you be interested in setting up a similar project?












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