As a UW employee, you have a unique opportunity to change lives on our campuses, in our state and around the world. UW employees offer their boundless energy, creative problem-solving skills, and dedication to build stronger minds and a healthier world. UW faculty and staff also enjoy outstanding benefits, professional growth opportunities and unique resources in an environment noted for diversity, intellectual excitement, artistic pursuits, and natural beauty. The University of Washington School of Law equips students with the with intellectual tools and hands-on legal experience in their journey to become practice-ready lawyers able to work in any field they choose through excellent doctrinal and experiential offerings. The University of Washington School of Law’s Clinical Program provides students with real-world legal experience assisting clients and communities working on real cases, transactions and projects for academic credit supervised by experienced faculty members. The Clinical law program currently has 10 in-house clinics . The University of Washington School of Law seeks applications for a clinical fellowship in the Civil Rights and Justice Clinic within UW's Law School. This is a 12-month position beginning Fall of 2026 , designed for lawyers with some law practice who are considering a career in civil-rights and public interest litigation, law school administration, or some combination of thereof. The principal supervisor for the position will be Professor David B. Owens. The fellow will work in our year-long Civil Rights and Justice Clinic. The Civil Rights and Justice Clinic (CRJC) aims to be a national leader in focusing on issues of constitutional rights, policing, and other issues related to criminal adjudication and social justice. The mission of the clinic is to address the violation of people’s rights, to confront racial and social inequity, and to pursue measures of accountability and reform that will prevent and deter wrongs in the future. To do so, the CRJC focuses principally on representing people, and classes of people, who have been abused or harmed by the police or other public officials in civil rights actions pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983. The bulk of the cases in the CRJC involve (1) representing wrongfully convicted individuals in civil suits seeking compensation for the grave harm and injustice of being wrongfully convicted and (2) individuals harmed or whose loved ones were killed police violence. In addition, the Clinic represents clients in state-court proceedings under Washington’s Wrongly Convicted Person’s Act; collaborating in non-litigation, community-driven initiatives the improve policy, practice, both locally and through legislative efforts; and engaging in research and advocacy to address issues systemic issues ( e.g. , through conducting research studies, authoring amicus briefs on important issues in state and federal courts.).
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Job Type
Full-time
Education Level
Ph.D. or professional degree