Jobs

Please send an email to jobs@cleaweb.org if you would like to post a position on our jobs board. Submit the job positing as a Word document or in the body of the e-mail. The postings are updated on a weekly basis.

  • 25 Feb 2014 9:30 PM | Maritza Karmely

    Kenneth & Harle Montgomery Foundation

    Clinical Fellowship Program

    Northwestern University School of Law

    Bluhm Legal Clinic

    Announcement/Job Description

    Northwestern University School of Law invites applications for its Kenneth and Harle Montgomery Foundation Clinical Fellowship Program.  The Montgomery Foundation Fellowship Program trains aspiring clinical teachers and public interest lawyers.  Montgomery Foundation Fellows work under the supervision of Bluhm Legal Clinic faculty.  Fellows, along with Clinic faculty, supervise students on projects focused on the reduction of jail and prison populations.  This will include representation of clients and development of policy initiatives. This is a two-year fellowship.  The Montgomery Foundation Fellowship Program seeks applicants with 2-5 years of legal practice experience.

    Applicants should send letters of interest and resumes to Shericka Pringle, Administrative Director, Bluhm Legal Clinic (springle@law.northwestern.edu) and to Professor Thomas F. Geraghty (tgeraghty@law.northwestern.edu).  The deadline for applications is March 15, 2014.  It is anticipated that the Montgomery Foundation Fellow will start in April.  Salary and benefits will be competitive.

    The Bluhm Legal Clinic currently includes clinical faculty teaching in its Children and Family Justice Center, The Center on Wrongful Convictions, The Center on International Human Rights, the Entrepreneurship Law Center, Roderick MacArthur Justice Center, the Environmental Law Clinic and other clinical programs that include appellate advocacy, criminal defense, civil litigation (predatory lending cases, civil suits arising from wrongful convictions, an landlord tenant cases), externship, negotiations and trial advocacy.

    Northwestern University School of Law is an equal opportunity, affirmative action employer and encourages nominations of and applications from women and minority candidates.

     

     

  • 20 Feb 2014 8:59 AM | Maritza Karmely

    Abrams Environmental Law Clinic Fellow

    The University of Chicago Law School is seeking qualified applicants for a full-time position training and supervising law students as a Fellow, appointed with the rank of Lecturer, in the Law School's Abrams Environmental Law Clinic. The appointment is for one year; re-appointment for a second term may be possible. The position is for the 2014-15 academic year and will start on July 1, August 1 or September 1, 2014, based upon mutual agreement of the Law School and the successful applicant.

    The Abrams Environmental Law Clinic attempts to solve some of the most pressing environmental problems at the local, regional and national levels. Representing environmental organizations, the clinic sues those who pollute illegally, fights for stricter permits, advocates for changes to regulations and laws, holds governmental agencies accountable, and promotes innovative approaches for improving the environment. While any given matter may require the use of one or more approaches, the clinic generally deploys adversarial approaches to help achieve its clients’ objectives. In addition, the clinic’s faculty are some of the primary resources for law student organizations and law students interested in environmental and energy issues, and clinic faculty have helped to organize panels and events on these topics. Clinical faculty also collaborate with other faculty and initiatives on these topics throughout the University.

    Reporting to the Director of the Abrams Environmental Law Clinic, the successful candidate will participate in all aspects of the Abrams Environmental Law Clinic. Job responsibilities will include supervising student projects including providing feedback on written work, participating in team meetings, working with the Director to develop teaching materials and teaching in the clinic, developing and selecting clients, managing aspects of a blog and website relating to environmental and energy law and the Clinic, and organizing and coordinating relevant events, lectures and other clinic activities. One goal of this Fellowship is to train aspiring clinical teachers and public interest environmental attorneys.

    Candidates must have a J.D. and at least two to four years of work experience as a practicing lawyer, with a strong preference for those who have worked for an environmental non-profit organization or government agency using litigation and similar enforcement tools. Must be a member in good standing of at least one bar and must be able to secure admission to the Illinois bar through waiver or examination promptly upon joining the clinic. Excellent writing, editing, advocacy, and supervision skills are required. Experience clerking at the trial court level is strongly desired, but not required. Prior teaching experience is highly desirable, but not required. Demonstrated ability to work with technology, including posting to a blog and website, is desired.

    Each candidate should submit a cover letter that includes a detailed description of the candidate's relevant practice experience and teaching/supervision experience, resume or curriculum vita, a law school transcript, a list of references, course evaluations from prior teaching experience, if any, and a legal writing sample (not edited by anyone else). Other material relevant to your candidacy may be included as well. Candidates are required to apply online and upload all application material at the University of Chicago Academic Career Opportunities website: https://academiccareers.uchicago.edu/applicants/Central?quickFind=53273 .

    To ensure full consideration of your application, all application material should be uploaded to the referenced website by March 31, 2014. Screening will continue until the position is filled or until the application deadline of June 30, 2014.
    The University of Chicago is an Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity Employer. 

  • 18 Feb 2014 11:10 PM | Maritza Karmely

    The University of Pennsylvania Law School’s Gittis Center for Clinical Legal Studies invites applicants for the position of Clinical Supervisor and Lecturer in its Civil Practice Clinic. The successful applicant will begin on July 1, 2014. The Civil Practice Clinic (CPC) is Penn’s oldest in-house, live client clinic. It enjoys a long and distinguished history of providing high-quality, legal assistance to indigent clients in a broad range of civil litigation matters, while promoting the professional development of students who serve as the front-line lawyers for their clients.

    The Clinical Supervisor and Lecturer will work closely with the Director of Clinical Programs and other CPC faculty in all activities, including course planning, teaching, supervising and mentoring law students, representing clients, and coordinating with other providers of civil legal assistance in the local community.

    The Clinical Supervisor will assist CPC students in developing and enhancing core competencies needed for successful lawyering, including client interviewing, case planning, client counseling, fact development, problem solving, legal research and writing, ethical decision-making, negotiation, and trial presentation skills. Students are certified by state and federal courts to engage in all aspects of lawyering under faculty supervision and they provide legal assistance individually and in teams on matters of critical importance to their clients, such as housing, consumer, family law, employment, education, civil rights, and civil forfeiture. Students also participate in weekly “case rounds” discussions of their cases where they engage collaboratively in problem solving on difficult substantive and ethical issues that arise in the course of litigation.

    The position is a contract position that is annually renewable up to a maximum of 5 years. It is the Clinic’s goal and expectation that the selected candidate will receive training, mentoring, and experience in all aspects of teaching, supervising, and running a successful litigation clinic that will enable the individual to pursue a career in legal academia, if desired, upon completion of service at Penn Law School.

    The successful applicant will be a Pennsylvania licensed attorney (or eligible to practice law in Pennsylvania under bar admission rules) who has five or more years of experience in civil litigation, a strong commitment to promoting access to justice, and a demonstrated interest in nurturing student development. The successful applicant will possess excellent organizational, communication, and advocacy skills and will be someone who works well independently and as a member of a team. A record of strong academic achievement, commitment to improving society, and intellectual engagement with the law are essential. Teaching experience (or a passion for teaching), creativity, strategic thinking, and demonstrated ability to work with diverse and economically disadvantaged clients are highly valued. 

    Review of candidates will begin immediately and continue until the position is filled. The University of Pennsylvania is an affirmative action/equal opportunity employer.Please refer questions to the Director of Clinical Programs, Louis S. Rulli, at lrulli@law.upenn.edu.

    Please send VIA E-MAIL a cover letter, resume, and three references to:
    Rachel Mayover, Clinic Administrator
    Gittis Center for Clinical Legal Studies
    University of Pennsylvania Law School
    3501 Sansom StreetPhiladelphia, PA 19104 
    E-mail: CPCSupervisor@law.upenn.edu
  • 03 Feb 2014 5:00 PM | Maritza Karmely

    CLINICAL FELLOW POSITION AVAILABLE

    Northwestern University School of Law

    Bluhm Legal Clinic

    Center on Wrongful Convictions of Youth

     

    Northwestern University School of Law invites applications for a two-year clinical fellowship in the Bluhm Legal Clinic’s Center on Wrongful Conviction of Youth (CWCY). The clinical fellowship will commence on September 1, 2014, and it is expected to end on August 31, 2016.

    The CWCY is a national organization that uses outreach, advocacy, education, and litigation to implement policies and practices to ensure that evidence used against youth is reliable. The project has a special, though not exclusive, emphasis on juvenile interrogations and false confessions.

    The fellow will serve as a two-year staff attorney and, as such, will work closely with and assume many of the same responsibilities as the CWCY’s current staff attorneys.  These responsibilities include serving as primary or co-counsel in direct representation of clients; representing our organization as amicus counsel; developing and/or implementing criminal or juvenile justice reform campaigns; drafting reports, policy papers, articles, or op-eds for publication; and conducting stakeholder trainings on issues relevant to our work. The applicant must also be comfortable working with law students and may assist with clinical teaching. An interest in academic research and writing is also a plus. 

                                                                                                                                                                    

    Applicants should email letters of interest, resumes, and a brief, persuasive writing sample to CWCY Legal Assistant Dolores Angeles at d-angeles@law.northwestern.edu.  No letters of recommendation are required, but up to three letters will also be accepted. The deadline for applications is March 7, 2014.  Salary and benefits will be competitive. Only those with a J.D., or those who expect to receive a J.D. by May 2014, are eligible to apply.  Applicants must also be members of the Illinois Bar or should expect to become members by November 2014.

     

    The Bluhm Legal Clinic includes clinical faculty who teach in a variety of its component Centers, including the Center on Wrongful Convictions, Children and Family Justice Center, Center on Wrongful Convictions of Youth, Center on International Human Rights, the Entrepreneurship Law Center, Roderick MacArthur Justice Center, the Environmental Law Clinic and other clinical programs that include appellate advocacy, criminal defense, civil litigation, externships, negotiations and trial advocacy.

    Northwestern University School of Law is an equal opportunity, affirmative action employer and encourages nominations of and applications from women and minority candidates.

     

  • 28 Jan 2014 9:49 AM | Maritza Karmely

    Suffolk University Law School Clinical Programs in conjunctions with the Boston Fair Housing Commission is seeking to hire a full-time clinical fellow to work in the Clinical Program’s Housing Discrimination Testing Program (“HDTP”).  The position is a one-year grant funded position with the possibility of extension depending on future funding.  The Clinical Fellow will be part of the HDTP team with Professor Bill Berman and Clinical Fellow Jamie Langowski.  Specific duties include:  coordination of housing discrimination tests, litigation of fair housing cases, and engagement in policy work related to housing discrimination. 

    Requirements for the position and more details can be found at:

    http://hire.jobvite.com/CompanyJobs/Careers.aspx?nl=1&k=Job&j=oJIlYfwu&s=Law_Clinical

    Applications for this position should also be submitted through this website.  We would ideally like the person to begin by March 2014 so please do not hesitate to apply or to forward this email to anyone you think may be interested.  If you have any questions about this position, please email Professor Bill Berman at wberman@suffolk.edu.

    We especially encourage applications from racial and sexual minorities, women and persons with disabilities.   

  • 23 Jan 2014 9:41 AM | Maritza Karmely

    LOYOLA UNIVERSITY CHICAGO SCHOOL OF LAW invites applications for a clinical faculty position, Associate Director of Writing Programs and Academic Support. Loyola is a student-focused law center inspired by the Jesuit tradition of academic excellence, intellectual openness, and service to others. The Writing and Academic Support Programs are vital parts of the School of Law's curriculum and mission.

    The Associate Director will assist in administering both the School of Law's Writing Program and Academic Support Program. The Writing Program includes a required three-semester curriculum, and advanced writing electives. The courses are skills-based and the staff is entirely comprised of experienced practitioners who serve as adjunct professors. The Academic Support Program includes an academic tutor program open to all first-year students and staffed by student tutors, an Academic Enhancement Program for targeted students, and upper-division electives focused on bar exam skills.

    Key responsibilities include assisting the Director in:

    - Administering and growing the existing Academic Support Program.

    - Teaching an exam skills program for targeted first-year students.

    -Training and supervising student tutors in the Academic Support Program.

    -Designing and developing bar exam preparation resources for students, including workshops, courses, and online resources.

    - Administering the curriculum for the required writing courses, including syllabi, problem files, lesson plans, and other course materials.

    - Coordinating courses electives and programming in both the Writing and Academic Support Programs, including Advanced Writing for Legal Practice and Bar Exam Writing Skills courses.

    - Training and supporting adjunct faculty and training and supervising student tutors in the Writing Program.

    - Providing individual counseling to students.

    - Collecting and assessing data relating to the administration of both the Writing and Academic Support Programs.   

    Minimum Education or Experience  Qualified applicants will have a J.D. degree from an ABA-accredited law school, relevant experience including previous teaching experience or equivalent administration experience, and a strong commitment to working with students. Previous experience teaching in bar preparation programs or academic support is a plus.    Applications can be submitted at the Loyola University Chicago Human Resources website: www.careers.luc.edu/applicants/Central?quickFind=56751 and are requested by February 28, 2014.

  • 21 Jan 2014 9:33 AM | Maritza Karmely

    It is the mission of Duquesne University School of Law to train lawyers to a high degree of professional skill with a special, Catholic sensitivity to ethical and moral concerns. Clinical education is one of our instructional cornerstones. The goals of the Clinical Legal Education Program are threefold:

    • ·         To serve the community by providing good counsel
    • ·         To train students in the actual practice of law
    • ·         To promote the rewards of public service

    Duquesne University School of Law is seeking candidates for the newly created position of Assistant Clinical Professor of Law beginning in the spring of 2014 or as soon thereafter as possible.  The position is full-time, year-round, and will include a concurrent, non-tenure track faculty appointment.

    This position will offer a practicing attorney with an interest in clinical teaching the opportunity to refine his or her teaching and supervisory skills while working together with experienced faculty members in the law school clinical program. 

    The successful candidate will serve as the Coordinator of the externship program and Supervising Attorney for a civil law clinic.

    The Externship Coordinator will be responsible for providing vision and leadership in the development and operation of the Externship Program for JD students. As mandated by ABA Standard 305, the Externship Coordinator will develop and teach externship seminars, counsel students about the wide variety of approved externship opportunities available, assist students to secure appropriate externships, mentor students as they develop their professional identity and lawyering skills, review written journal submissions and timesheets from students, communicate with placement supervisors on a regular basis about student progress, engage in communications with the bar and bench to help secure new and appropriate placements for students, visit all local externship placement sites every three years, train placement supervisors, review potential and existing externship placements to ensure they are appropriate educational experiences and comply with ABA standards, work with administrative staff so that accurate records are maintained, maintain the externship program website and extensive mandated written materials, communicate with externship faculty at other law schools, and attend and participate in appropriate conferences.

    The Supervising Attorney will be responsible for teaching a clinic. We seek to hire faculty committed to providing a powerful individual and collective learning experience that engages students actively in working collaboratively with underserved individuals and communities as they look to gain access to justice. Although applicants in any field of practice are welcome to apply, we strongly prefer candidates with civil experience. 

    The mission of Duquesne Law School’s clinical program is to provide live-client experiential learning opportunities to second, third and fourth-year law students. Duquesne Law School clinical program includes a Family Law Clinic, Federal Litigation Clinic, Unemployment Clinic, Urban Development Clinic, Veterans’ Law Clinic, and Civil Rights Clinic.  

     

    The Clinical Instructor will be responsible for choosing and supervising cases that allow for the development of interviewing, counseling, negotiation, drafting, research, trial advocacy skills and related practice skills. The clinical instructor's duties will include supervision of clinic students' casework, appearing in court, and, together with other clinical faculty, planning and teaching classes and simulation exercises. The Supervising Attorney will work with the Clinical Director and a member of the doctrinal faculty.

    Applicants should have practice experience and an academic record that demonstrate the potential for clinical teaching. Prior clinical or other legal teaching experience (including clinic administration) is highly desirable.  Candidates must hold a J.D. degree and be eligible for licensure in Pennsylvania (before applying for the position, out of state candidates should review Pennsylvania Board of Bar Examiners Rule 311.)

    Minimum qualifications for the position include admission to practice before the highest court of any state, at least three years of law-related professional experience after law school, strong oral and written communication skills, strong interpersonal skills, and strong organizational skills. We seek candidates with an interest in clinical teaching and previous experience working with low-income communities.

    Preferred qualifications include at least five years of law-related professional experience after law school, substantial experience supervising externs, substantial law school teaching experience, and substantial experience in two or more of the following areas:  judicial clerkship, work as a prosecutor or public defender, public interest practice, or government agency practice.

    To apply, please email a (1) cover letter, (2) resume, (3) writing sample, and (4) names and telephone numbers of three references to Professor Martha Jordan, Chair, Faculty Recruitment Committee at lawrecruitment@duq.edu.  Electronic submissions only.  Candidates are strongly discouraged from mailing materials to the Faculty Recruitment Committee.  The application period will close February 15, 2014, or earlier if the position is filled.  A writing sample is required.  Applicants will be notified if an interview is to be scheduled.  No phone inquiries, please.

    Review of applications will begin immediately and will continue until the position is filled.  Duquesne University is an EEO/AA employer.  We especially encourage applications from racial minorities, women, and others who would enrich the diversity of our academic community.   

  • 17 Jan 2014 4:00 PM | Maritza Karmely

    Applications are now being accepted for the Albert M. Sacks Clinical Teaching & Advocacy Fellowship at Harvard Law School.

    The fellowship will provide an opportunity for an attorney to work at the Harvard Immigration and Refugee Clinical Program on direct representation, appellate litigation, and policy advocacy work, starting in the summer of 2014. The Fellow will assist with the supervision of clinical students and work closely with experienced attorneys and clinicians at Harvard Law School and Greater Boston Legal Services. Application deadline for this position is February 15, 2014.

    JD earned within 3 years of hire date required. Candidates with experience in immigration removal and asylum practice strongly preferred.   Second language capability in Spanish or French preferred.

    To apply, please send the following to hirc@law.harvard.edu:

    - Current resume

    - Statement of interest (approx. 750 words) that addresses your potential for clinical teaching and advocacy, your relevant prior experience, and any other information you believe will help the hiring committee evaluate your candidacy.

    - Writing sample (approx. 10 pages, preferably in a subject area relevant to the position)

    - At least three references (please include email and phone contact information)

    - Law school transcript (an informal copy or list of all grades and coursework is acceptable)

     

    If you have any questions, please email us at hirc@law.harvard.edu.

    Sabrineh Ardalan
    Assistant Director

    Harvard Immigration and Refugee Clinical Program

    6 Everett Street, Suite 3106
    Cambridge, MA 02138

    617-384-7504

    sardalan@law.harvard.edu

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