Professor Johanna Miller
The
Legislative Advocacy Clinic will challenge students to conceptualize,
plan, and implement a
campaign to pass social justice legislation in
the New York City Council. Working with the New York
Civil Liberties
Union, students will research relevant statutes and case law, draft
legislation, and
develop and implement an advocacy campaign to enact
a bill. While in the clinic, students will
interview clients and
other interested parties, conduct legal and social science research, draft
policy
papers and proposed legislation, meet with community leaders
and elected officials and draft
testimony for a legislative hearing.
The clinic’s work will include both proposing affirmative
legislative initiatives and defensive efforts to respond to legislation
proposed by others.
By the end of the course, students will have a
framework for understanding the lawyer’s role as
lobbyist,
organizer, educator, coalition-builder, media spokesperson, and activist.
Some clinic
meetings will take place at the offices of the New York
Civil Liberties Union in lower Manhattan. The
clinic seminar will
meet weekly for an hour and forty minutes. Students will be expected to
complete
an average of 6 to 10 hours of work on their cases each
week.