Immigration and Human Rights Clinic – 7842

* Multi-semester course

The Immigration and Human Rights Clinic represents persons seeking asylum in the United States. This clinic, which is part of the James H. Binger Center for New Americans, provides students with extensive client contact, legal writing, and courtroom advocacy experience. Students receive frequent and detailed feedback on all of their clinic work.

For their representation of clients in asylum cases, students interview and counsel their clients on a regular basis, research conditions in the countries where their clients suffered persecution, write briefs and represent their clients in hearings at U.S. Immigration Court. Depending on the resolution of their case at the trial level, students will write appellate briefs to the Board of Immigration Appeals and the 8th Circuit Court of Appeals. Students also work on public policy and community outreach projects which bring them into contact with immigrant rights groups at the state and national level. As a result of their work in the clinic, students learn about U.S. immigration law and policy and participate in the Binger Center’s innovative strategies for improving the lives of immigrants through strategic litigation, well-informed public policy, and community outreach and education.

The clinic is a year-long course open to second and third-year students, beginning in the fall semester each year. Enrollment is generally limited to eight students. Please contact Professor Mackenzie Heinrichs (hein0438@umn.edu) or Professor Stephen Meili at smeili@umn.edu with any questions.

Additional Commitments: Weekly case status meetings are required throughout the entire academic year. Students are also required to attend the clinic seminar that meets on a weekly basis in the fall semester and on an as-needed basis in the spring.

Translators will be available for those students who do not speak their client’s native language. Many of our clients have suffered extreme forms of persecution, including torture, prolonged solitary confinement, and domestic violence. Students will frequently work with mental health professionals in addressing the psychological impact of such persecution.

NOTE: This course requires certification pursuant to the student practice rule and is open to JD students only.

Credits
4F/3S
Prerequisites

JD only. LAW 6872 Immigration Law strongly recommended.

Graduation Requirements
Experiential Learning
Subject Area
Civil Litigation *
Human Rights *
Immigration Law *
International Law *
Litigation, Alternative Dispute Resolution & Advocacy
Student Year
Upper Division
Grade base
A - F
Course type
CLN