Job o’ the Day: Policy Advocacy Fellow for the ACLU of Washington’s Project to Protect Health Care Choices (Seattle)

From the PSJD job posting:

The ACLU of Washington is a non-profit public interest organization devoted to protecting civil rights and civil liberties. Its staff of thirty employees and numerous volunteers work in a fast-paced, friendly and professional office.

The Project: The ACLU of Washington is working to advance a comprehensive, strategic and effective education and advocacy campaign to safeguard access to medical care free from restrictions based on others’ religious doctrine. Increasingly, secular hospitals are merging with religiously affiliated ones and coming under their religious restrictions to care. The ACLU of Washington believes that no patient should be refused access to lawful health care because of the religious doctrines of the institutions running hospitals, clinics, or other medical facilities. Health care facilities open to the general public should not refuse to provide reproductive health care and end-of-life care services; nor should they discriminate against LGBT patients and families. Religious ideology should not dictate which health care services a patient may choose.

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PSJD Project Assassin Series: On the Intersection of Politics and Public Interest Law

EDITOR’S NOTE: Every summer, PSJD hires current law students as Project Assistants. They help us manage our website, social media marketing, and more.  These students come from different law schools all over the country, but they are all united in their commitment to pro bono and public interest law. They do such an amazing job at helping us out that we’ve dubbed them our “Project Assassins”! Every day this week, a different Project Assassin will be contributing to the blog, discussing their particular legal interests. In this edition, Denai Neilander, a rising 2L at University of San Francisco College of Law, discusses why she believes politics and public policy should be at the heart of public interest work.

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From Idealist: “So you’ve started a pro bono project… now what?”

by Ashley Matthews, PSJD Fellow

If you’re on the job hunt, you’ve probably heard about Idealist.org. It’s a great jobs site that focuses solely on nonprofit and social impact work, and includes everything from development gigs to international human rights fellowships. Last week, Idealist contributing writer Katie Mang wrote a great blog post on starting and implementing a pro bono project. The article is written in general terms to apply to any career field, but she’s got lots of great tips for us law students and lawyers as well. Here’s a few tips that especially apply to law student and attorneys providing pro bono service:

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PSJD Project Assassin Series: On the Right to Counsel for Immigrant Detainees

EDITOR’S NOTE: Every summer, PSJD hires current law students as Project Assistants. They help us manage our website, social media marketing, and more.  These students come from different law schools all over the country, but they are all united in their commitment to pro bono and public interest law. They do such an amazing job at helping us out that we’ve dubbed them our “Project Assassins”! Every day this week, a different Project Assassin will be contributing to the blog, discussing their particular legal interests. In this edition, Blerta Mileti, a rising 2L at University of Iowa College of Law, discusses the right to counsel for immigrant detainees.

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Job o’ the Day: Staff Attorney with Consumer Watchdog in Santa Monica, California

From the PSJD job posting:

Consumer Watchdog, a nationally recognized, California-based citizen advocacy group, deploys an in-house team of public interest attorneys, policy experts, and grassroots activists to advance and protect the interests of consumers and taxpayers. Our work, which is spotlighted daily in the national and local media, includes advocating before the courts, regulatory agencies, and the Legislature in the areas of corporate accountability, health care reform, insurance reform, consumer privacy, legal system reform, and other state and federal matters.

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PSJD Project Assassin Series: On DOMA, Prop 8 and Public Interest Law

EDITOR’S NOTE: Every summer, PSJD hires current law students as Project Assistants. They help us manage our website, social media marketing, and more.  These students come from different law schools all over the country, but they are all united in their commitment to pro bono and public interest law. They do such an amazing job at helping us out that we’ve dubbed them our “Project Assassins”! Every day this week, a different Project Assassin will be contributing to the blog, discussing their particular legal interests. First up: David Munoz, a rising 2L at American University Washington College of Law! Read on to see what he has to say about the Supreme Court’s recent decisions on gay marriage.

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Job o’ the Day: Postgraduate Fellowship with Farmworker Justice in Washington, DC

Farmworker Justice, a nonprofit serving migrant and seasonal farmworkers across the country, is looking for a Fellow to support their work on health, labor rights and immigration policy. Anyone with a bachelor’s degree can apply, but Farmworker Justice also handles litigation. This would make a great part-time job for any interested law graduate waiting for bar results! From the PSJD job posting:

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PSJD Public Service News Digest – July 19, 2013

by Christina Jackson, NALP Director of Public Service Initiatives & Fellowships

Happy Friday!  Looking for something to do this weekend?  Check out our Having Fun on the Cheap series on PSJD for great options in a number of cities.

Spotlight on Outstanding Public Servants: If you know someone we should honor, drop me a line.

Here are the week’s headlines:

  • The Association of Legal Aid Plans of Canada supports training to help meet legal needs of clients with mental health issues;
  • Connecticut Bar Association Young Lawyers Division raises $2.1 million in pro bono service;
  • Mid-Minnesota Legal Aid celebrates 100 years of advocacy!;
  • Harvard’s Legal Aid Bureau also celebrating 100 years of service;
  • Legal aid in Ontario seeing unexpected cuts;
  • Good example of creating community partnerships – VA awards $1.4 million to Goodwill;
  • Dramatic changes to legal service delivery being discussed in Nova Scotia;
  • NY panel to look at ways in-house can provide pro bono and increase access to justice;
  • Spotlight on Public Service Servants: Legal Aid of Nebraska is celebrating its 50th anniversary this year;
  • Super Music Bonus featuring Kristian Smith, PSJD’s Summer Public Interest Projects & Publications Fellow! Read the rest of this entry »

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Job o’ the Day: U.S. Dept. of Transportation Honors Attorney Program

 

From the PSJD job posting:

The Department’s Honors Attorney Program offers new law graduates (and recent law graduates completing judicial clerkships or fellowships) a unique opportunity to gain an in-depth understanding of the Department’s diverse law practice.

During the two-year program, honors attorneys rotate once in the Department’s Office of the General Counsel and in up to five Chief Counsels’ Offices of the Department’s operating administrations.

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Alternative Public Interest Work Part 2: Private Public Interest Firms

by Kristian Smith, PSJD Summer Projects and Publications Coordinator

This is the second part of a two-part series on Alternative Public Interest Work. Check out “Part One: Can I Do Public Interest Work at a Law Firm?” here!

As mentioned in Part 1 of this series, law firms and public interest work don’t always go hand-in-hand, but there are many ways for law students and lawyers to combine a law-firm setting with public interest work. Though typically smaller than a traditional law firm,  private public interest firms provide a setting similar to that of other law firms while focusing their practice primarily on public interest work.

First things first: What is a private public interest firm?

According to a paper written by Scott L. Cummings of UCLA School of Law and Ann Southworth of University of California, Irvine School of Law, the term private public interest law firm refers to a range of “hybrid” entities that fuse private and public goals. The paper defines private public interest firms as “for-profit legal practices structured around service to some vision of the public interest. They are organized as for-profit entities, but advancing the public interest is one of their primary purposes—a core mission rather than a secondary concern.” Harvard Law School, which produces a Private Public Interest Law Firms guide in coordination with Columbia School of Law, similarly defines private public interest firms in the guide as “private, for-profit firms that dedicate at least a significant portion of their caseload to matters that have some broad social, political, or economic impact.”

Private public interest firms can be the perfect blend of the public interest work of non-profits and the resources of large law firms because, according to Cummings and Southworth’s paper, private public interest firms can take on large-scale social change litigation that non-profits can’t pursue because of resource limits and big-firm pro bono programs won’t take on because of business conflicts.

But not every private public interest firm is the same. Some firms focus solely on public interest issues and take on only no-fee or reduced-fee clients while others also take on plaintiff’s torts cases for funding. While civil rights and employment law are the most popular practice areas for private public interest firms, some firms specialize in other areas, such as environmental law. Most of these firms take on a large range of cases – from discrimination, housing and voting rights, to consumer protection, human rights, and plaintiff class action suits. These firms may also represent a wide range of clients, including individuals, nonprofits and community groups. Some examples of these firms include Traber & Voorhees, Chatten-Brown & Carstens, and Miner, Barnhill & Galland (where President Obama practiced!).

How to Get Hired

It may be more difficult to find jobs at these types of firms than at traditional firms due to their smaller size, but many of these firms still hire summer associates and entry-level attorneys. Some firms, such as Bernabei & Wachtel, also offer fellowships as a way to hire new attorneys. For a comprehensive list of public interest firms and their hiring practices, check out Harvard and Columbia’s private public interest firms guide.

 

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