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Hannah Garry, clinical assistant professor of law, will head the clinic. Photo/Sue Daniels



USC Law Launches International Human Rights Clinic

Students at the USC Gould School of Law will receive firsthand experience waging legal battles against human rights violators when its International Human Rights Clinic launches this academic year.

Headed by newly recruited clinical assistant professor of law Hannah Garry, the clinic will work with organizations committed to the global human rights movement. The clinic will partner on claims with lawyers in Africa, representing asylum seekers and refugees. USC Law students also will work on cases before international tribunals.

“The students will work on cases involving prosecution of serious violations of human rights, including war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide,” said Garry, who joins USC Law in August from the University of Colorado Law School in Boulder, where she has been a visiting assistant professor of international law. “Our goal is to seek justice on behalf of individuals and groups alleging violation of their human rights, both at home and abroad.”

Domestically, the clinic will help students engage in civil litigation on human rights violations perpetrated abroad and brought as claims under the Alien Tort Statute.

“We want students to understand holistically, through supervised, experiential learning, how to apply international human rights law in practice and give them the best training in legal and advocacy skills,” Garry said.

The new clinic is USC Law’s sixth, joining the Immigration Clinic, the Post-Conviction Justice Project, the Mediation Clinic, the Small Business Clinic and the Intellectual Property and Technology Law Clinic.

Because USC Law’s clinics offer real-world experience under faculty supervision, they are in high demand, said dean Robert K. Rasmussen. The new International Human Rights clinic will develop, expand and complement USC Law’s international law program.

“I am truly excited by the addition of this clinic to our already impressive array of live-client clinics,” Rasmussen said. “USC Law students have for years displayed a passion for justice, and this clinic increases our international scope.”

The new clinic will meet rising demand for human rights legal training and is expected to attract high-caliber students with an interest in learning about or practicing human rights law, said clinical professor Niels Frenzen, who directs USC Law’s Immigration Clinic.

“Not only will the new clinic offer practical skills,” Frenzen said, “it will encourage critical thinking and new approaches to human rights legal work.”


(2010-04-01 / USC News )
 
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4/1:Kenya’s Rights Activist Proud of Roll Leading to ICC Investigation of Post- Election Violence(VOA)
4/1:USC Law Launches International Human Rights Clinic (USC News)
4/2:Human rights group looks at its first case in US (Businessweek)
4/2:Why the Health Reform Law Fails to Meet Human Rights Standards (huffingtonpost)
4/3:Rights group: Chavez trying to silence dissent (Washingtonpost)
4/3:Ban stresses promotion of human rights on visit to Turkmenistan (UN News Centre)
4/4:Please don't call it 'human rights' (National Post)
4/4:Peace allows change of people's minds toward human rights (AngolaPress)
4/6:Human rights group issues report on Palestinian prisoners' reality in Israeli jails (paltelegraph)
4/6:Human Rights Hypocrisies (counterpunch) 
 
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