Category: Law Firm Pro Bono

Getting an Early Start

A recent article in National Law Journal cites a Kaplan Test Prep study which found that prospective law students are paying little attention to the grim employment statistics for recent law school graduates.  Indeed, job placement ranked dead last among all factors presented to the 645 prospective law students surveyed.  The most important factor in deciding which school to attend was a law school’s rank. This got us thinking about prospective law students and what role pro bono and other public interest opportunities play in their decision about where to attend law school.  Many aspiring lawyers enter law school with

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The Wheels on the Bus….

Pro bono clients, especially those in rural areas, often do not have the means to travel to a more populated city or town to receive legal assistance.  Mobile clinics are becoming a popular way to reach out to remote and underserved clients in need of help.  More than ten years ago the Winnebago of Justice was created in California, as a revival of the concept of a bookmobile, to be the nation’s first mobile legal self-help clinic.  Here are a few examples of innovative models of mobile pro bono assistance: Nixon Peabody*† participated in a pro bono project through the

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UPDATE: It Gets Better

Lady Gaga (with the recent unveiling of her Born This Way Foundation) has joined The PBEye in shining light on the problems associated with bullying and the importance of creating congenial and accepting communities.  We previously highlighted examples of law firms and legal departments collaborating with organizations to undertake pro bono work focused on promoting educational environments where every student can feel safe and thrive. We have an update on one of those projects, in case you missed it:  In March, Faegre Baker Daniels LLP*† reached a landmark agreement on behalf of its clients, students who had filed a federal

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Pro Bono Back on the Big Screen

Recently, the power of pro bono was featured in the documentary The List at the Tribeca Film Festival.  Directed by Beth Murphy, The List tells the classic pro bono story of client, volunteer attorney, and the nonprofit organization that brings them together.  However, beyond that, nothing about this story and the people in it is ordinary. The film follows three Iraqi nationals who have been endangered as a result of their work with and in support of the U.S. effort in Iraq and are trying to find safety.  It introduces Kirk Johnson and The List Project, the nonprofit he founded

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Pro Bono to Promote Equal Rights

The PBEye imagines a world without discrimination and inequality, and are proud of the pro bono lawyers who work hard every day to achieve that vision.  Transgender people suffer persistent intolerance and experience prejudice and violence throughout their everyday life.  They experience workplace discrimination, are met with challenges to their parental relationships, lack sufficient access to quality healthcare free from discrimination, and face difficulties in obtaining appropriate name and gender designations on their identity documents.  The PBEye is gratified that many law firms have expanded their pro bono programs to advocate for and defend protections of transgender people under federal, state, and

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Pro Bono as Professional Punishment?

No surprise here — we spend a lot of time thinking, writing, and talking about why lawyers, law firms, and legal departments do pro bono work!  We even concluded the 2012 Pro Bono Institute Annual Conference with a half-day workshop, Why Do Lawyers Volunteer?, during which renowned expert Dr. Larry Richard examined questions related to why lawyers choose to do pro bono work, and how the individual’s workplace influences—for better or worse—that decision. Until it recently came to our attention, one driver that we had not focused on is pro bono service performed as a result of professional disciplinary action. 

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Improving Partner Participation: Part 2

Is your law firm struggling with a culture that treats pro bono as exclusively “associate work”?  As we reported last week, it is critical to gain and maintain meaningful participation from partners.   Whether it is in a hands-on or supervisory role, partner participation demonstrates that pro bono is a vital part of the firm and ensures that pro bono clients receive high-quality service. Wondering how best to engage partners at your firm? We’ve got you covered!  Here are some additional helpful hints and best practices for achieving significant partner involvement and successfully addressing obstacles to partner participation: Visible and meaningful

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Improving Partner Participation

A popular and well-attended session at last month’s 2012 Annual Conference was “Best Practices for Improving Partner Participation.”  Many law firms struggle with how to involve more partners in pro bono work.  The PBEye believes that it is critical to attain meaningful participation by partners — it broadens a firm’s pro bono capacity and helps ensure the long-term vitality of pro bono by sending a clear message that pro bono is an important and lasting firm value. Here are a few helpful hints and best approaches for achieving significant partner involvement and successfully addressing obstacles to partner participation: Perform diagnostics

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Pro Bono in Practice: Immigration

People across the country and around the world will be watching closely when the U.S. Supreme Court hears arguments tomorrow on the bitterly disputed immigration enforcement law that was passed two years ago in Arizona, inspiring similar laws in Alabama, Georgia, Indiana, South Carolina, and Utah.  Arizona’s law, known as SB 1070, expanded the powers of state police officers to ask about the immigration status of anyone they stop and to detain those suspected of being illegal immigrants. The Obama administration challenged the law, and federal courts suspended several of its most contentious provisions.  Numerous firms, working pro bono, have

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Remembering a “Giant”

The PBEye and access to justice community mourn the loss of John G. Brooks  this week after the “champion for access to legal services for the poor died Sunday at his home.” Brooks, who was the past president of the Boston Bar Association and partner at Peabody & Arnold, spent his career advocating on behalf of access to legal services. In a tribute to Brooks on its website, the Boston Bar Association notes: In the 1950s, he began a lifetime commitment to pro bono work to improve the delivery of legal assistance for the poor. He became intimately involved in the

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