Immigrants’ Rights/International Human Rights Clinic

 


Learn about Seton Hall Law Clinics

 

Center for Social Justice (CSJ)
[email protected] | 973-642-8700 or 973-761-9000 ext. 8700
833 McCarter Highway, Newark, NJ 07102

 

Number Name Credit Type Offering

CLIN7190

Immigrants' Rights/International Human Rights Clinic

 

The Immigrants’ Rights/International Human Rights Clinic represents people from all over the world who are in need of protection from persecution, trafficking and torture. In addition to representing clients before asylum officers and in Federal Immigration Court, students may also represent clients in appeals to the Board of Immigration Appeal, the Second and Third Circuits, or the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights. Students may also be engaged in human rights reporting and fact-finding as well as comparative law and human rights projects. They also assist immigrant victims of domestic violence and other crimes in seeking visas to grant them legal status to remain in the United States. Another key aspect of the clinic is providing assistance to detained immigrants in the greater Newark area. The classroom component combines trial skills with substantive immigration law. Clinics are open to all students who have completed 2/3 of the credits required for graduation.

The course is letter-graded for both the clinical and classroom components.



Prerequisites: Minimum Cumulative 2.60 GPA, Evidence, Professional Responsibility and Persuasion and Advocacy.

Note: Students cannot participate in an externship in the same semester in which they are enrolled in a clinic.

4

Clinic

in-class

CLIN7191

Immigrants' Rights/International Human Rights Clinic

 

The Immigrants’ Rights/International Human Rights Clinic represents people from all over the world who are in need of protection from persecution, trafficking and torture. In addition to representing clients before asylum officers and in Federal Immigration Court, students may also represent clients in appeals to the Board of Immigration Appeal, the Second and Third Circuits, or the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights. Students may also be engaged in human rights reporting and fact-finding as well as comparative law and human rights projects. They also assist immigrant victims of domestic violence and other crimes in seeking visas to grant them legal status to remain in the United States. Another key aspect of the clinic is providing assistance to detained immigrants in the greater Newark area. The classroom component combines trial skills with substantive immigration law. Clinics are open to all students who have completed 2/3 of the credits required for graduation.

The course is letter-graded for both the clinical and classroom components.



Prerequisites: Minimum Cumulative 2.60 GPA, Evidence, Professional Responsibility and Persuasion and Advocacy.

Note: Students cannot participate in an externship in the same semester in which they are enrolled in a clinic.

1

Clinic

in-class

 

Professors: Lori Nessel and Amelia Wilson

Offered: Fall and Spring semesters.

Credits: 5

INTRODUCTION

The Center for Social Justice has assisted hundreds of immigrants in more than thirty years of practice in this area. Students in the Immigrants’ Rights/International Human Rights Clinic represent people from all over the world who are in need of protection from persecution, trafficking and torture, as well as non-citizens who have survived domestic violence, workplace abuse or other violent crimes in the United States. In addition to representing clients before asylum officers and in federal Immigration court, students may also represent clients in appeals to the Board of Immigration Appeals, the Second and Third Circuits, or the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights. They focus on the intersection of immigration, labor, employment, constitutional, and criminal law. Students may also be engaged in human rights reporting and fact-finding as well as advocacy before international bodies.

Highlights of student accomplishments in the Immigrants' Rights/Human Rights Clinic include:

  1. Publishing a human rights report documenting hundreds of cases in which U.S. hospitals have repatriated seriously ill or disabled non-citizen patients through extra-judicial processes. This report also analyzed the body of laws that incentivize this life-threatening practice.
  2. Winning asylum in immigration court for a young father from Somalia who survived torture and shooting by the al-Quaeda-affiliated group al-Shabaab.
  3. Winning asylum for a client fleeing violence in Syria.
  4. Winning asylum for a political activist who protested against human rights violations in his home country in West Africa.
  5. Publishing a human rights report documenting the hardship faced by men and women fleeing persecution abroad due to policies that deny work authorization to many asylum-seeker (co-authored with Human Rights Watch).
  6. Winning asylum for a woman from Guatemala who survived severe domestic violence in her home country.
  7. Filling a petition with the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, seeking justice for victims of two politically-motivated massacres in Haiti (decision pending).
  8. Obtaining Special Immigrant Juvenile Status for a teenage girl from Honduras who fled to the United States on her own
  9. Winning asylum for survivors of Female Genital Mutilation and other forms of gender-based violence.
  10. Winning release and bond for men and women detained in immigration detention centers in Northern New Jersey.
  11. Obtaining a special U visa for a father from Mexico who survived a violent workplace assault in the United States, and obtaining U visas for his wife and children.
  12. Organizing workshops to support young Dreamers (teenagers and young adults who were brought to the United States as children without documents) in filing applications for Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA).
  13. Representing immigrant workers who have suffered wage theft and other workplace abuses and are eligible for deferred action.
  14. Obtaining a T visa for a young trafficking victim from Nigeria who had been abused and enslaved as a domestic worker.

By acting as lead counsel in cases and projects like these, students learn many facets of lawyering, including problem solving, interviewing and counseling, legal analysis and reasoning, legal research and writing, factual investigation, oral advocacy, and organization and management of legal work. These cases present students interested in areas including International Human Rights, Immigration Law, Constitutional Law, Criminal Law, Labor and Employment Law, and Family Law with a unique opportunity to learn about human rights conditions around the world and to see how immigration status interacts with so many other areas of law.

CLINICAL LAW PRACTICE

Students will work in teams under the supervision of Professor Nessel in all phases of representation from initial client interviews through court hearings and appeals. Students interview and counsel clients; work with interpreters; interview witnesses; conduct factual investigations; prepare petitions, affidavits, legal briefs, and policy reports; engage in legal research and analysis; prepare clients and witnesses for interviews and court hearings; and litigate cases in court. Students may also be engaged in community outreach, such as trainings for immigrant workers, and in human rights fact-finding and reporting. Students should expect to devote approximately fifteen hours a week to their clinical work, for a total of 195 hours for the semester. Students should expect occasions such as trials and filing deadlines where considerably more hours may be required. Students must have flexibility in their schedules to accommodate the demands of an active litigation practice.

THE SEMINAR

The clinical experience also includes a 1-credit seminar that meets once a week for two hours and covers substantive areas of immigration, asylum, refugee and international human rights law, and offers an opportunity for trial skills exercises and group discussion of ethical and strategic issues that arise in each case. 

CRITERIA FOR ADMISSION

In addition to the general clinic pre-requisites, consideration will also be given to the student's prior experience, interest in the subject area, commitment to public interest law and proficiency in a language commonly spoken by the client population. Students are strongly encouraged to take Immigration and Naturalization Law prior to or concurrently with the clinic.