Jacob Burns Community Legal Clinics Perspectives Fall 2018

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T H E GEORGE WA SHI NGTON U N I V ER SIT Y L AW SCHOOL

JACOB BURNS COMMUNITY LEGAL CLINICS

Perspectives

PROGRAM EST. 1970

SPOTLIGHT

FALL 2018 ISSUE

A Decade’s Legacy: GW Law’s Friedman Fellows

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nnie B. Smith is a tenured Associate Professor of Law at the University of Arkansas-Fayetteville. She directs the Civil Litigation and Advocacy Clinic and a Human Trafficking Clinic that she created. Recently, the law school also appointed her the Director of Pro Bono and Community Engagement. She has taught interviewing, counseling, and negotiations as well. Professor Smith’s academic career began in GW Law’s Friedman Clinical Fellowship program. Funded in major part by a generous donation from Philip Friedman, Esq. in 2006 and established by Associate Dean Phyllis Goldfarb in 2008,

Friedman Fellows, past and present, with Dean Goldfarb (far left)

the Friedman Fellowship was conceived for attorneys—especially those dedicated to public interest practice—who are contemplating a shift into clinical teaching. Dean Goldfarb designed the fellowship to help attorneys make that shift, supporting their development as clinical teachers and scholars while they support the teaching and service mission of the Jacob Burns Community Legal Clinics. It’s a win-win arrangement in which the law school receives the benefits of the fellows’ talents and contributions while promoting their careers in academia and public interest law. For the past 10 years, Friedman Fellows have enhanced the work of the Clinics while taking other courses and earning an LLM degree. Fellows co-teach and co-supervise in a particular clinic along with experienced clinical faculty, learning from the faculty member’s supervision and example. Among the LLM courses for the Friedman Fellows is Clinical Teaching and Scholarship, a two-year class created and taught by Dean Goldfarb to cultivate clinical methods of teaching and supervision and academic methods of research and scholarship. Dean Goldfarb supervises the fellows in writing their graduate theses, most of which have been published thereafter. Prior to the Friedman Fellowship, Professor Smith’s career as a civil legal attorney was focused on migrant workers’ rights. While at the Jacob Burns Community Legal Clinics, Professor Smith assisted in teaching and supervising the classwork and casework in both the continued on page 18

SPOTLIGHT  1, 18–19 SELECTED PRESENTATIONS AND PUBLICATIONS  2–3 NEWS  4 KUDOS  5–6 INSIGHT: CLINIC PROFILES  7–15 EVENTS  16–17

SPOTLIGHT

Clinic Students Solve Decades-Old Mystery and Reunite Family

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nvolvement in clinical legal education often leads to important outcomes for clients and valuable lessons for students. Sometimes, it also leads to poignant stories. One of the most meaningful stories of the past year came from the Public Justice Advocacy Clinic (PJAC), taught and directed by Professor Jeffrey Gutman. When third-year student-attorneys Noelle Cozbar and Soo Choi met Mr. P. early in the continued on page 19

Professor Jeffrey Gutman with (l–r) students Noelle Coxbar and David Coard, client Mr. P., and student Caroline Merlin.


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