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Each year, some 200 second- and third-year law students, under the direction
of the Law School's faculty, provide free legal services to more than
2,000 mostly low-income or elderly Washington-area residents through a
variety of community clinics. As Jacob Burns, a GW Law School alumnus
and benefactor of the Jacob Burns Community Legal Clinics Program, once
remarked, "More often than not, the people who come to the Community
Legal Clinics are caught up in situations vital to them, but over which
they have no control. They come to us because they don't know what else
to do and cannot afford a lawyerand the Law School is there to help."
Administrative Advocacy Clinic/
Advocates for Older People
Students provide services for indigent and elderly Washington
residents who are pursuing their entitlements to various government rights
and benefits before local and federal agencies and courts.
Civil Litigation Clinic
Students certified by the Washington, D.C., court system counsel clients,
draft pleadings, prepare cases for trial, conduct examinations of witnesses,
and argue cases under the direction of the clinic's supervising attorney.
Students may handle many types of civil and family matters, including
small claims litigation, property disputes, and a full range of domestic
relations cases.
Consumer Mediation Clinic
Students in the Consumer Mediation Clinic assist local consumers
from all income levels who are involved in disputes with area businesses.
The law students act as neutral mediators who help consumers and businesses
reach negotiated settlements. The clinic's D.C. Community Dispute Resolution
Project provides mediation services for residents involved in a variety
of interpersonal disputeswork related, neighbors, and family members.
Students in the Mediation Clinic are trained to co-mediate these cases
referred to GW by the U.S. Attorney's Office.
Domestic Violence Clinic
The
Domestic Violence Clinic represents clients seeking civil protection orders
or their enforcement. These students also work with local public defenders'
offices on battered women's self-defense cases and participate in a larger
system reform project designed to improve community response to domestic
violence, such as a court study, the monitoring of police practices, and
the development of alternative resources for domestic violence victims.
Environmental Law Advocacy
Center
Through the Law School's Environmental Law Advocacy Center,
which includes the J.B. and Maurice C. Shapiro Environmental Law Clinic,
the Environmental Crimes Project, and the Environmental Legislative Group,
students work on a broad range of international, national, and local issues
in areas ranging from environmental justice to community outreach programs.
Federal and Appellate Clinic
Students in the Federal and Appellate Clinic pursue direct
appeals from criminal convictions in Maryland, Washington, D.C., and federal
courts, as well as prisoners' rights cases in the U.S. Court of Appeals
for the Fourth Circuit. The clinic also conducts studies of appellate
court procedures and practices, which have proven to benefit the local
bar association.
Immigration Clinic
Indigent clients from around the world in asylum and deportation
cases seek out the services of students in the Immigration Clinic. Students
represent aliens in federal court, at the Board of Immigration Appeals,
in immigration court, and the Immigration and Naturalization Service.
The clinic represents aliens with criminal convictions, as well as incarcerated
aliens.
Project for Older Prisoners
(POPS)
Law students also work within the criminal process, particularly
the prison and parole system, through Project for Older Prisoners (POPS).
These students interview and evaluate low-risk older and geriatric inmates
in obtaining parole or other forms of release from incarceration. POPS
operates in five statesLouisiana, Maryland, Michigan, North Carolina,
and Virginiaand the District of Columbia. To date, the program has
secured the release of almost 100 inmates without a single act of recidivism
on the part of those released.
Small Business Clinic
In the Small Business Clinic, students provide start-up legal
assistance to area small businesses and nonprofit organizations. They
may also work on community and economic development projects that provide
legal support to individuals and groupshelping low-income people
and communities avoid economic exploitation and dependency through self-help
initiatives, such as micro-loans.
Stipends and Fellowships
In addition to its clinics, the Law School supports the community
service efforts of its students by granting these students academic credits
while they are working in judicial, governmental, and public service organizations.
The school also underwrites students who take pro bono or low-paying public
service jobs. By providing stipends and fellowships to support these activities,
the Law School enables more students to enter public service while lessening
the financial hardship that often comes with such service.
Vaccine Injury Clinic
Students in the Vaccine Injury Clinic represent children and
other individuals who have suffered serious vaccine-related injuries and
who are seeking recovery of damages in trial and appellate proceedings
before the U.S. Court of Federal Claims by virtue of the National Childhood
Vaccine Injury Act.
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POPS Program Gives a Second Chance
GW law students apply their classroom instruction to the criminal justice
system by working with prisoners looking into parole and other release
options through the Project for Older Prisoners (POPS), a program designed
to combat prison overcrowding and assist aging and disadvantaged prisoners.
Since 1989, POPS has given guidance to more than 500 prisoners, making
it the largest volunteer prison assistance project in the country. POPS
prisoners are selected based on their age or medical condition. A student
is then assigned to a case and visits with the prisoner to discuss parole
or other incarceration options, such as prison health care facilities.
Under supervision, the student conducts an extensive background analysis
to determine the inmates recidivism. If the prisoner is considered
a low-risk inmate, the student determines where the prisoner would live
and how he would support himself upon his release. For higher-risk prisoners,
students consider what prison nursing home facilities may be available
to them.
In addition to working with individual cases, students conduct research
on legislative reform on both the national and state levels. The students
conduct extensive examinations into the political and economic climate
of the state, researching how legislation is passed in the state and what
laws currently exist regarding prisoner release.
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