law student division Student Lawyer
  December 1998 - volume 27, number 4
bar
In This Issue:

FEATURES

It's Hard to be Civil

Lawyer Tales

All Clients Great and Small


DEPARTMENTS

Officially Speaking

Briefly

Coping

Legal-ease

Jobs

Online

Esq.


DIVISION DIALOGUE

Spreading the Word

Liaison Notes

Spotlight

Public Service Tax Program Lets You Do Good and Make Good

Howard University School of Law Earns National SBAAward

Do Good and Get Practical Experience

Business Law Writers Can Win $2,500

Any Questions?

Statement of Ownership

Do Good and Get Practical Experience

The American Bar Association's Law Student and Public Services divisions invite you to participate in their 1999 public service summer internship program.

The internship is a unique program designed to enable law students to engage in an individualized public interest legal research and writing project over a 10-week summer period. Together with Public Services Division lawyers and a law school faculty reviewer, a law student will develop and complete a substantive legal monograph.

The areas of attention are:

  • Bioethics and the law
  • Disability law
  • Election law
  • Environmental law
  • Homelessness and poverty
  • Immigration law
  • Law Library of Congress and access to legal resources
  • National security law
  • Substance abuse
  • Public interest in law school and as a career

Applicants must be entering their second or third year at an ABA-accredited law school; be a member of, or have applied for membership in, the ABA's Law Student Division by Jan. 31, 1999; identify a law school faculty member knowledgeable in the subject who will help review the work in progress; demonstrate exceptional research and writing skills; and submit an application package that includes a cover letter, a resume, two references and a three- to five-page essay describing the project the student proposes to undertake. Proposal applications are judged for clarity and focus, organization, methodology, feasibility of execution within a 10-week period, strength of writing, value of the written product as a contribution to the field, and relevance to the division's concerns.

This is not a paying internship. We encourage law students to incorporate the internship into an externship/internship program at their law school or to seek alternative funding sources.

To request an application package, contact Carrie Coleman at the American Bar Association, 740 15th St. N.W., Washington, DC 20005-1022; 202/662-8608, ext. 3004; cccoleman@staff.abanet.org