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Directory of Law School Public Interest and Pro Bono Programs

Loyola Law School, Los Angeles

Loyola Law School
Loyola Law School, Los Angeles
919 South Albany Street
Los Angeles, CA 90015
www.lls.edu

Go to a Pro Bono Program Category

Go to a Public Interest Program Category

Law School Pro Bono Programs

Contact Information

Sande Buhai
Executive Director and Clinical Professor
sande.buhai@lls.edu
(213) 736-1156

Christine Zeimantz
Public Interest Programs Manager
(213) 736-1059
Christine.Zeimantz@lls.edu

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Category Type

Public Service Graduation Requirement Program

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Description of Program

The Public Interest Law Department oversees the pro bono program, which was instituted by the faculty in October 1992, along with other programs. Students are provided with an "Approved Pro Bono Listing" and are responsible for contacting those agencies in regards to completing their 40-hour requirement. This list is not exclusive; students wishing to satisfy their pro bono requirement with other verifiable public interest organizations can do so with the approval of the Director.

The Public Interest Law Coordinator is responsible for tracking and clearing students who have satisfied the mandatory requirement before graduation. Students are asked to evaluate their experiences at their pro bono placement and offer any suggestions or comments about the evaluation portion of the supervisory log report form, which they must submit to document/verify the completion of their forty hours.

Students must complete a minimum of forty unpaid hours of legal services in an approved public interest agency or complete at least two units in approved public interest externship programs. Only services provided to traditionally underrepresented groups.

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Location of Program

Stand-alone – Public Interest Law Department

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Staffing/Management/Oversight

The Director is a full-time clinical professor and is assisted by a full-time Department Administrator (Public Interest Law Coordinator).

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Funding

There is no budget funding beyond staff salaries for the program.

The Public Interest Law Department's Coordinator provides administrative support to pro bono group projects and to interested faculty.

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Student Run Pro Bono Groups/Specialized Law Education Projects

General Relief Advocacy Program (through Public Counsel) - The GR Relief program aids Skid-Row individuals in receiving government benefits they have been denied.

Loyola Child Advocates - Loyola Child Advocates seeks to increase on-campus awareness of child advocacy issues, involve students and faculty in outreach efforts to neighborhood schools and strengthen ties to the legal child advocacy community. The organization identifies and helps coordinate pro bono opportunities in child and family law, runs a tutoring program for two local elementary schools and hosts speaker forums featuring family law professionals.

Volunteer Income Tax Assistance Program (VITA) - Students assist low-income persons with income tax forms.

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Faculty and Administrative Pro Bono

Pro Bono by faculty is encouraged, recognized and counts towards tenure and salary as service to the school and community.

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Awards/Recognition

Students are presented with a certificate of appreciation/completion documenting the total pro bono/public service hours performed.

The Dean of the Law School distributes service awards at graduation to students who have demonstrated strong commitments to community service programs.

Awards given at annual luncheon or reception

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Community Service

Faculty and students work together to create community projects including the donation of cellular phones, programmed to dial 9-1-1 and give them to domestic violence shelters/victims, as well as the food drives which are given twice a year during which time professors give students "passes" if they bring in food to be donated.

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Law School Public Interest Programs

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Contact Information

Sande Buhai
Executive Director and Clinical Professor
(213) 736-1156
sande.buhai@lls.edu.

Christine Zeimantz
Public Interest Programs Manager
(213) 736-1059
Christine.Zeimantz@lls.edu

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Certificate/Curriculum Programs

There is a public interest curriculum

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Public Interest Centers

The Public Interest Law Department

Learning Rights Disability Mediation Center

Center for Conflict Resolution

Center for Juvenile Law and Policy

Cancer Legal Resource Center

Western Law Center for Disability Rights

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Public Interest Clinics

Cancer Legal Resource Center

Center for Conflict Resolution

Civil Rights Ligitation Course

Disability Rights Legal Center

Education Advocacy

Hobbs District Attorney Program

Juvenile Justice Clinic

Public Interest Law Practice Seminar

Street law

VITA

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Externships/Internships

Loyola Law School has an extensive externship program that places students in government agencies, public interest offices and judicial chambers. Professor Barbara Blanco, Director of the program is nationally known as an expert in this area of legal education.

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Classes with a Public Service Component

Civil Rights Litigation Seminar

Public Interest Law Seminar

Street Law

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Public Interest Journals

37 Loyola Law Review - Social Justice Symposium

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Public Interest Career Assistance

Students receive extensive counseling in regards to applying for public interest post-graduate fellowships and Equal Justice Works grants. Students also have full access to materials in the Public Interest Law Department such as PIES (Public Interest Employment Service) listings that are received monthly. The Career Services office also provides numerous workshops on interviewing techniques as well as resume preparation.

Additional opportunities:

Annual UCLA Public Interest Career Day -- The Public Interest Law Department is an active participant in this career fair. Over 100 interviews are granted to Loyola Law School students to interview at this event with various public interest agencies.

Annual Government Careers Information Day

The Public Interest Fair, held every November, involves over fifty public interest organizations who visit the campus and speak with students on a one-on-one basis regarding employment, volunteering, and summer placement.

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Loan Repayment Assistance Programs (LRAP)

Since July 1989, Loyola Law School has provided financial assistance to graduating students who accept lower-paying public interest employment, but who need help in repaying educational loans. The PILAP (Public Interest Loan Assistance Program) is available to students who are employed, at a salary of less than $38,000, by a qualified public interest program. The maximum award an applicant can receive is $8,100 annually.

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Post-Graduate Fellowships/Awards

Law School Funded:

Loyola Post-Graduate Fellowships in Public Interest Law -- www.lls.edu (click on Public Interest Law Department/Post-Graduate Fellowship Opportunities).

Graduate Student Funded:

Other Funding Sources:

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Term Time Fellowships/Scholarships

Law School Funded:

Public Service Corps Program, which began Winter 2002, was designed to give recent Loyola Law School graduates the opportunity to gain legal experience while awaiting Bar results. Fellows may work between 75-100 hours and will be compensated at the rate of $10.00/hour. Funding is provided by the law school.

Graduate Student Funded:

Other Funding Sources:

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Summer Fellowships

Law School Funded:

SPIEP (Summer Public Interest Employment Program)

Loyola Law School's federal work-study program supports 70 students (60 in public interest, 10 in government positions) working at local non-profits and government agencies. Currently, the maximum amount a student can earn on a summer work-study contract is $3,000.

PILF - Public Interest Law Foundation Grant

The student run Public Interest Law Foundation offers supplemental funding for SPIEP applicants ranging from $1,00-$2,000. Fellows will be expected to work at least 300 hours at their approved public interest organization.

Graduate Student Funded:

Other Funding Sources:

PILF - Public Interest Law Foundation Grant - The student run Public Interest Law Foundation offers supplemental funding for SPIEP applicants ranging from $1,00-$2,000. Fellows will be expected to work at least 300 hours at their approved public interest organization.

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Extracurricular and Co-Curricular Programs

The Public Interest Law Department is an active participant with the Alliance for Justice promoting First Monday campaigns (ex. Gun Violence).

The Public Interest Law Department offers open forums and speaker presentations to discuss various public-interest topics during lunch sessions.

Social Justice Mondays

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Student Public Interest Groups

Public Interest Law Foundation - PILF is a student-run, non-profit organization dedicated to furthering the careers of law students who choose to work in public interest law by promoting legal employment and involvement opportunities to combat social, political and economic injustices.

Updated: 7/16/2007

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