Transnational Legal Clinic (Paoletti/Bradley/Kopel)
Meeting Times/Location
MW 1:30PM - 2:50PM
Tanenbaum Hall 345
Category
Clinics/Externships
Credits
0.0
PLEASE SEE IMPORTANT ENROLLMENT PROCEDURES FOR CLINICS AVAILABLE ON THE REGISTRATION INSTRUCTION PAGE.
Gain lawyering experience under close faculty supervision and mentorship while you provide direct representation to individuals from around the world in immigration court and before USCIS in applications for asylum and other humanitarian forms of relief, as well as possible federal court litigation and administrative advocacy seeking enforcement of rights in and release from detention. You will also have the opportunity to partner with and represent national, international, and grassroots organizations in litigation and policy advocacy before the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, the United Nations, and foreign and U.S. governmental agencies. All students gain training and experience in transferable skills of lawyering across cultures, languages, and legal systems.
Seminar time is devoted to developing core lawyering competencies (i.e., interviewing, counseling, case theory and persuasion, and strategic planning skills) through lecture, simulations, in-class exercises, videos, and readings. App. half of all sessions are devoted to case rounds where student teams present legal, factual, ethical and strategic issues that arise in your client representations, brainstorm solutions, and solicit feedback from your TLC colleagues on pathways for moving forward. Case rounds are also an opportunity to develop presentation skills, and your ability to effectively seek, receive, and deliver constructive feedback.
Weekly meetings with your faculty supervisor provide the mentoring, guidance and constructive feedback needed to ensure your clients receive the best possible representation, while also building competencies and confidence to serve you well into your future career.
While there are no prerequisites, the seminar is not a substitute for an international or immigration law course. Substantive law is discussed as it arises in your cases. Students are responsible for researching and analyzing the underlying law(s) and procedure(s) relevant to your client work, with guidance provided by your professors. Throughout the semester, students are expected to engage in critical reflection on the choices presented and made in your cases and are required to write a mid-semester and end-of-semester self-evaluation memo assessing personal performance and professional development.
Class participation is mandatory. Seminars will be held in-person. Supervision is held in person unless otherwise agreed with your professor. A hybrid of additional sessions, including an orientation session, simulations, and informal gatherings may be scheduled based on students’ identified availability at the beginning and at various times throughout the semester.
Required winter reading: The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down, by Anne Fadiman (selected chapters). The book explores the relationships between and among the American medical system, doctors and social workers, and a Hmong girl and her refugee family, and raises several issues of cross-cultural communication that repeat in your own client representations throughout the semester.
PLEASE NOTE: the clinic is not just a class, it’s a professional commitment to clients, peers, and faculty. If you are enrolled in a clinic you will have until Nov. 27, 2023, at 5pm to confirm and commit to your seat. Additional instructions will be provided via email after you are enrolled. Once you confirm and commit, you will be fully enrolled in the clinic and may not drop without permission from the instructor and Dean of Students.
You may only enroll in one clinic or externship. Students enrolled in the clinic will receive an email with additional information and a mandatory brief survey.
Skills Learning outcomes: Demonstrate an understanding of the individual course skill; Demonstrate the ability to receive and implement feedback; Demonstrate an understanding of how and when the individual course skill is employed in practice.
International and Comparative Law Learning outcomes: Demonstrate a core understanding of international and comparative law, both substantively and procedurally; Perform legal analysis in the context of international and comparative law; Communicate effectively on topics related to international and comparative law; Demonstrate an understanding of the role of international and comparative law, and their interconnection with domestic law.
Courts and the Judicial System Learning outcomes: Demonstrate a core understanding of both substantive and procedural issues in the operation of our legal system; Perform legal analysis in the context of procedural issues and the judicial process; Communicate effectively on topics related to procedure and the judicial process; Demonstrate an understanding of how procedural issues and the judicial process affect all other area of our legal system.
Perspectives on the Law Learning outcomes: Demonstrate an understanding of how the law affects, and is affected by, the individual course topic; Perform legal analysis in the context of the individual course topic; Communicate effectively on the legal and other aspects of the individual course topic; Demonstrate the ability to use other disciplines to analyze legal issues relevant to the individual course topic, including economics, philosophy, and sociology, as appropriate.
Administrative and Regulatory Law Learning outcomes: Demonstrate a core understanding of administrative and regulatory law and the administrative process, including the role of statutory authorization and work of administrative agencies; Perform legal analysis in the context of administrative and regulatory law; Communicate effectively on topics related to administrative and regulatory law; Demonstrate an understanding of the role administrative and regulatory law play in our legal system and in society as a whole.
Professional Responsibility and Ethics Learning outcomes: Demonstrate an understanding of how the law affects, and is affected by, the individual course topic; Perform legal analysis in the context of the individual course topic; Communicate effectively on the legal and other aspects of the individual course topic; Demonstrate the ability to use other disciplines to analyze legal issues relevant to the individual course topic, including economics, philosophy, and sociology, as appropriate.
Public Interest Learning outcomes: Demonstrate a core understanding of the varied legal aspects of public interest law; Perform legal analysis in the context of public interest law; Communicate effectively on topics related to public interest law; Demonstrate an understanding of how public interest law is connected to and affected by a wide variety of legal and regulatory structures and doctrines.
Equity and Inclusion Learning outcomes: Demonstrate a core understanding of the varied legal aspects of equity and inclusion; Perform legal analysis in the context of topics related to equity and inclusion; Communicate effectively on the legal aspects of equity and inclusion; Demonstrate an understanding of how equity and inclusion are connected to and affected by a wide variety of legal and regulatory structures and doctrines.
Textbooks
"Essential Lawyering Skills " by Kreiger Neumann |