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Alumni
Create Immigration Clinic Fellowship
Erik
Gerding ’98 knew that fundraising, even for a good cause, is never easy.
But as it turns out, when the cause is the Harvard Immigration and Refugee
Clinic, it’s easier than might be expected.
Gerding is one of a group of
HLS alumni at Cleary, Gottlieb, Steen & Hamilton who felt their experience
at Harvard’s clinic had been one of their best at HLS. They wanted to
recognize “the tradition of teaching excellence” and give something back.
Housed at the Greater Boston
Legal Services Center, the program has provided a clinical component for
courses in immigration and human rights to hundreds of students since
its founding in 1984. Students get credit for representing clients seeking
asylum, who are fleeing human rights abuses. And even after graduation,
Gerding says, he and other clinic alumni continue to consult with director
Deborah Anker LL.M. ’84 and supervisors Nancy Kelly, John Willshire Carrera,
and Eleanor Newhoff on pro bono immigration cases they do for Cleary,
Gottlieb.
To show their appreciation,
Gerding and other alumni decided to establish a summer fellowship at the
clinic for an HLS student doing the kind of work they had found so rewarding.
“Raising the money was surprisingly
easy,” Gerding said. “Debbie is one of the most effective voices in the
field of immigration. People wanted to show their support for the clinic,
especially at a time when federal funding is being cut.”
Cleary, Gottlieb joined
in the HLS associates’ efforts, matching the funds to create the Cleary,
Gottlieb, Steen & Hamilton Harvard Immigration and Refugee Clinic
Fellowship.
“We are deeply grateful
for this demonstration of commitment from our alumni and for the opportunities
that the fellowship provides,” said Anker, who has headed the clinic since
1988. “There is a desperate need for free representation of low-income
persons and especially immigrants.”
The first fellow, Allison Brownell
Tirres ‘01 (jointly enrolled in the J.D. program and the Ph.D. program
in history at Harvard), spent the summer at the clinic assisting clients
seeking asylum and helping to draft a policy report on the application
of the one-year filing deadlines for asylum claims. She says the fellowship
has allowed her both to work directly with clients and to advocate for
changes in the regulations governing immigration. “I now have a much clearer
sense of the way client services and advocacy depend on each other,” she
said.
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