Tenants Advocacy Fellowship - Cornell Law School
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![]() United States, New York, Ithaca | |
![]() 337 Pine Tree Road (Show on map) | |
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Tenants Advocacy Fellowship - Cornell Law School
Founded in 1887, Cornell Law School is a top-tier law school, currently ranked 14th by U.S. News & World Report. We offer a 3-year JD program for about 200 students per class, a one-year LLM program for about 120 students from countries throughout the world, and a doctoral (JSD) program for about 2-3 new students per year. Cornell Law School has 41 tenured and tenure-track faculty, including 20 with chaired faculty positions; and 15 clinical professors in the Lawyering Program and in clinics at the local, national, and international level. Our faculty is consistently ranked among the top in the country for scholarly productivity and influence and has pre-eminence in many areas, including quantitative and qualitative empirical legal studies, international and comparative law, and robust doctrinal scholarship in core fields. Our school is committed to being recognized as the leader among law schools at combining inspiring theoretical, doctrinal, and experiential teaching with cutting-edge scholarship in a supportive, intellectually rich community, so that our graduates can achieve excellence in all facets of the legal profession. The Tenants Advocacy Fellowship was established in 2021 and is currently funded by a subcontract with Legal Assistance of Western New York. The Fellowship provides funding for a recent graduate of an ABA-accredited law school who shows exceptional commitment to the field of public interest law and, if applicable, a dedication to housing justice. The Fellowship is designed to provide an opportunity for one law graduate or admitted attorney to gain substantive experience in housing and racial justice through direct legal services that will improve the lives of low-income tenants facing eviction, homelessness, or displacement. The Tenants Advocacy Fellow will:
The Fellow will work collaboratively with the Managing Attorney, Tenants Advocacy Staff Attorney, and the Tenants Advocacy Practicum students, although they will not have any formal teaching responsibilities. This position is ideal for a candidate who is eager to use their prior litigation and housing advocacy backgrounds to help prevent eviction and displacement in the upstate New York. It calls for someone entrepreneurial, who is willing to help shape a new model for the delivery of the Practicum and the hotline's important services. This grant funded appointment is for a one-year term and is benefits eligible. The position is renewable based on performance and future funding. The selected candidate may choose to work a hybrid schedule, with part of the work taking place remotely (pending university approval if working outside New York State) and part of the work taking place in person. Please note that the New York Convenience of employer guidelines require New York State individual tax reporting and withholdings for this position. Additional individual state income tax filings may also be required if working outside New York State. Minimum Qualifications Applicants may be attorneys or recent graduates from an ABA accredited law school. The applicant must either be a licensed attorney or plan to sit for the July 2025 New York State bar exam. Preferred Qualifications Preference will be given to applicants with demonstrated or stated commitment to public-interest law generally, and specifically to tenants' rights and housing justice; professional, volunteer and/or subject matter expertise in substantive housing law in New York State; and experience supervising or mentoring students. To Apply Please submit the following to https://academicjobsonline.org/ajo/jobs/29736. Additional information may be requested during the application process. 1) Application Cover Sheet: This page must include the following: i. Your full name ii. Your law school iii.Your year of graduation from law school iv. Your current mailing address v. Your phone number vi.Your email address vii.Your Date of NYS Bar Admission (if applicable) 2) CV 3) Statement of Interest: Please submit a statement of interest for this one-year fellowship. The statement should include the following: i. A description of the applicant's specific commitment to public service and how the applicant came to focus on the area of Veterans benefits and/or housing justice; the applicant's past experiences and work activity in the public interest broadly construed; the applicant's aspirations for future public interest work (with a focus on serving Veterans as appropriate) and the ways in which the Fellowship will help to achieve those goals. 4) Writing Sample: Please submit a writing sample of no more than 10 pages. The applicant should submit a writing sample that indicates a comfort with legal writing and analysis, as opposed to a journal article that would potentially be more focused on sociological, theoretical, economic, etc. 5) Two recommendation letters from people familiar with your work. To ensure maximum consideration, please submit all application materials by March 14, 2025. Applications will be reviewed on a rolling basis, with priority given to early applicants. Questions may be referred to William Niebel, Managing Attorney (william.niebel@cornell.edu). The expected starting salary for this fellowship is $70,000. Pay Range: $61,008.00 - $87,000.00Pay Ranges: The hiring rate of pay for the successful candidate will be determined considering the following criteria:
Employment Assistance: For general questions about the position or the application process, please contact the Recruiter listed in the job posting or email mycareer@cornell.edu. If you require an accommodation for a disability in order to complete an employment application or to participate in the recruiting process, you are encouraged to contact Cornell University's Office of Institutional Equity and Title IX at voice (607) 255-2242, or email atequity@cornell.edu. Applicants that do not have internet access are encouraged to visit your local library, or local Department of Labor. You may also request an appointment to use a dedicated workstation in the Office of Talent Attraction and Recruitment, at the Ithaca campus, by emailing mycareer@cornell.edu. Notice to Applicants: Please read the required Notice to Applicants statement by clicking here. This notice contains important information about applying for a position at Cornell as well as some of your rights and responsibilities as an applicant. EEO Statement: Diversity and Inclusion are a part of Cornell University's heritage. We are a recognized employer and educator valuing AA/EEO, and we do not tolerate discrimination based on any protected characteristic, including race, ethnic or national origin, citizenship and immigration status, color, sex/gender, pregnancy or pregnancy-related conditions, age, creed, religion, actual or perceived disability (including persons associated with such a person), arrest and/or conviction record, military or veteran status, sexual orientation, gender expression and/or identity, an individual's genetic information, domestic violence victim status, familial status, marital status, or any other characteristic protected by applicable federal, state, or local law. We also recognize a lawful preference in employment practices for Native Americans living on or near Indian reservations in accordance with applicable law. Cornell University embraces diversity and seeks candidates who will contribute to a climate that supports students, faculty, and staff to all identities and backgrounds. We encourage individuals from underrepresented and/or marginalized identities to apply. 2025-02-14 |