

Monica Chang, '23, Greater Boston Legal Services, Boston, MA Olivia Maturana-McCauley, '23, Conta Costa County Public Defender's Office, Martinez, CA Madhu Gupta, '22, Palo Alto City Manager's Office, Palo Alto, CA Madeline Noh, '22, Human Rights Watch, New York, NYĬharles Saperstein, '22, Rhode Island Center for Justice, Providence, RIĮmily Whitten, '22, AsylumConnect, New York, NYīharati Ganesh, '22, Philadelphia District Attorney's Office, Philadelphia, PA Hannah Ponce, '22, Rhode Island Center for Justice, Providence, RIĪbigail Barton, '22, Rhode Island Center for Justice, Providence, RI Niharika Rao, '23, New York Legal Assistance Group, New York, NYĬaroline Cole, '22, Civil Rights Clinic at Cardozo Law School, New York, NY Natalie Romain, '22, Children's Defense Fund, New York, NY Toby Shore, '22, Youth Justice Network, Harlem, NY

Julian Melendi, '24, Surveillance Technology Oversight Project, New York, NYĪbey Philip, '23, New York Attorney General's Office, New York, NYĮmily Tian, '24, Legal Action Center, New York, NY Sayda Martinez-Alvarado, '23, All Our Kin, New Haven, CT Nina Lin, '24, CT Women's Education and Legal Fund, Hartford, CT Larissa Jimenez Gratereaux, '23, The Brennan Center for Justice, Washington, DCĮliza Kravitz, '24, Texas RioGrande Legal Aid, Eagle Pass, TXĭennis Lee, '24, Mississippi Center for Justice, Jackson, MS Melat Eskender, '24, The Bronx Defenders, Bronx, NY

Gema Quetzal, '23, Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights for the San Francisco Bay Area, San Francisco, CA Lauryn Johnson, '23, Transgender Law Center, Oakland, CAĭiego Liebman, '24, Mexican American Legal Defense and Education Fund, San Antonio, TX Kelsey Carido, '23, Innovation Law Lab, Portland, OR Katherine Harper, '23, Youth Advocacy Intern with the Abolitionist Law Center, Pittsburgh, PAĬhandler Nutall, '23, The Council for Court Excellence, Washington, DC Niya Banks, '23, The Center for Civic Innovation, Atlanta, GA Jennifer Lee, '23, ACLU's National Political Advocacy Department, New York, NYĪva Peters, '24, Legal Aid Society, Education Law Unit, New York, NY Stav Bejerano, '23, Center for Court Innovation, New York, NYīenjamin Bograd, '23, San Francisco District Attorney's Office, San Francisco, CA Susan Baek, '23, Legal Aid Society, New York, NY Nia Warren, '24, NAACP Legal Defense Fund, Washington, DC Swathi Kella, '23, Greater Boston Legal Services, Boston, MAĪriel Silverman, '23, Environmental Law Insitute, Washington, DC James Jolin, '24, California Rural Legal Assistance, Inc., Oxnard, CA Department of Justice, Washington, DCĭoudou Tshiyena, '24, Aliento, Phoenix, AZ Mary Ingram, '23, Brooklyn Defender Services, Brooklyn, NYĪmiri Nash, '24, The Bronx Defenders, New York, NYĬarina Sandoval, '23, Rhode Island Center for Justice, Providence, RIĪsa Turok, '24, The Legal Aid Society, New York, NYĪnik Willig, '24, U.S. Renata Happle, '24, Earth Law Center, Durango, CO Victoria Cadostin, '23, National Immigration Law Center, Los Angeles, CA Sharmie Azurel, '23, Asian American Bar of New York, New York, NY The Liman Center annually designates one fellowship each for Legal Action Center (New York or Washington, D.C.) and All Our Kin (New Haven or New York). Some organizations offer remote internships.Īpplicants are encouraged to look for host organizations that have resource needs and serve communities with resource needs. Organizations must be federally-designated nonprofits-those with 501(c)(3) status. Subject areas of host organizations have included immigration, housing, labor and workers’ rights, indigent criminal defense, death penalty representation, disability rights, children and family services, environmental policy, and mental health advocacy. Placements are not limited to organizations in a particular field. International placements are not available. Organizations must be in the United States. Some advocate on behalf of underserved communities. Many provide lawyers for people who cannot afford them. Host organizations serve the public good in a variety of ways. *Graduate students at Princeton are also eligible. Undergraduates from these schools may apply: Even after your fellowship, you will be part of this nationwide network of leaders. It can also include advocacy and policy work. (As a Liman Summer Fellow, your primary work cannot be clerical.)Īll Summer Fellows must submit a final report, usually by early September.Īs a Fellow, you will take part in the Liman Colloquium, held every spring at Yale Law School, where you will join students, scholars, and advocates from around the country. Public interest law includes direct services, such as helping people who cannot afford attorneys. Liman Summer Fellowships give students the opportunity to work for 8–10 weeks at public interest organizations related to law.
