Jun 13, 2024
Columbia Law School seeks an experienced human rights advocate with a strong interest in clinical teaching to join the Human Rights Clinic as the Clinic's Associate Research Scholar / Supervising Attorney, beginning in the summer of 2024.
The Human Rights Clinic trains students to be leaders in human rights advocacy. Students work on social justice advocacy around the world, in partnership with civil society, communities, and those directly affected by abuse. Through the Clinic, students learn the main tools to advance human rights as well as the theory and critique of human rights.
The Supervising Attorney will work in the Human Rights Clinic, with its directors, staff, and students to advance human rights and address global power imbalances around the world. They will do this through a range of activities including implementing clinical projects, syllabus development, teaching, scholarly research and writing, and human rights programming.
The Supervising Attorney will be an integral part of the Columbia human rights community, and will play a key role in fostering this community, especially through the Law School's Human Rights Institute (HRI), the hub of human rights research, advocacy, and education at Columbia. Over the course of their appointment, they will undertake increasing responsibility in the Clinic, including designing and teaching clinic seminars; building and leading clinic projects in partnership with civil society organizations and impacted communities; providing close supervision, guidance, and feedback to teams of students working on those projects; and conducting scholarly research and writing. Through this work, they will be equipping students with the skills necessary to be strategic and creative human rights advocates, critically analyze human rights, and advance innovative human rights methodologies. The Supervising Attorney will be provided extensive professional, teaching, practice, and scholarship mentoring from the Clinic Director and other senior staff at the Clinic and HRI.
The duration of the appointment is for a period of three years, which may be renewable for up to two years based on performance. This is a non-tenure track position. The Associate Research Scholar / Supervising Attorney will hold the University title of Associate Research Scholar. They will also hold a secondary instructional appointment, pending faculty approval, as a Lecturer in Law for each semester in which they teach in the Clinic.
Minimum Qualifications:
Preferred Qualifications:
Applications will be considered on a rolling basis until the position is filled, but are strongly encouraged to be submitted by July 1, 2024.
Applicants should submit: (a) a letter of interest, describing the applicant's qualifications and interest in the position (Cover Letter); (b) a one page statement of the applicant's vision of human rights clinical education, primary areas of interest in the development of human rights scholarship and practice, and any clinical project(s) the applicant would propose to develop in the first year of their appointment (Proposal); (c) a curriculum vitae; (d) a law school transcript; (e) two letters of recommendation; and (f) the names of no more than three additional references (Other Document).