Immigrants’ Rights Clinic

Do you have questions about DACA, the Travel Ban or recent Executive Orders?

The Immigrants’ Rights Clinic has gathered additional resources for members of the Stanford and Bay Area communities.

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Overview

Students in the Immigrants’ Rights Clinic have full responsibility for defending clients against deportation in San Francisco Immigration Court, the Board of Immigration Appeals, and the federal courts of appeals. As part of that work, students write complex legal briefs, argue cases, conduct fact investigation, interview witnesses and clients, and represent clients in mini-trials. Students also engage in cutting-edge litigation and advocacy in partnership with local and national immigrants’ rights organizations.

Latest Updates

Immigrants’ Rights Clinic Students Create Unique Guide for Pro Se Asylum Seekers

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The Stanford Law School Immigrants’ Rights Clinic is pleased to announce the release of a new pro se asylum guide. The guide is the first of its kind to provide a step-by-step description of how one can represent themselves in their asylum removal proceedings before the San Francisco Immigration Court (the fourth largest immigration court in the country). The guide is interactive and participatory, explaining how pro se asylum seekers can take helpful and affirmative steps to prepare for their (non-detained) merits hearings.

The guide, created and written by law students under the supervision of Jayashri Srikantiah and Lisa Weissman-Ward, was produced on behalf of Centro Legal de la Raza (Oakland, CA) and Community Legal Services of East Palo Alto (East Palo Alto, CA).

read more Asylum Pro Se Guide – English Asylum Pro Se Guide – Spanish

 


 

The Experience of Representing a Client in an Asylum Case: A Student’s Perspective

Immigrants' Rights Clinic

I started working with E in the spring of 2016 as a full-time clinic student in the Immigrants’ Rights Clinic. E was a new client for the clinic who was in removal proceedings and seeking asylum to stay in the United States. In her home country, E had witnessed a brutal murder committed by a powerful gang and a corrupt police officer. She was targeted and severely harmed because she was a witness to the crime. Despite having been victimized, she bravely attempted to pursue justice, even knowing she could never be safe again in her home country.

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Students File Brief in Support of Sanctuary Cities

Matthew & Andrew with Brief

Clinic students Matthew Sellers, (’17) and Andrew Chang, (’17) wrote and filed a brief on behalf of community organizations in support of Santa Clara County’s Motion for Preliminary Injunction against the President’s Executive Order to render “Sanctuary Jurisdictions” ineligible to receive federal funding.

Read Brief

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Collaborative and Supportive Supervision

We create a nurturing, reflective environment where students can learn from their experiences. Students develop their professional judgment and critical problem-solving skills as they learn key litigation and lawyering skills.

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Clinic Director Jayashri Srikantiah Writes About Resistance and Immigrants' Rights In Our Current Political and Social Climate

“For many of us, Trump’s success in the election felt like a victory for his anti-immigrant, racist, and xenophobic rhetoric. How can we prepare and resist now and in the years to come? I do not have the answer. But as I have worried about the effects of Trump’s immigration policies on immigrant families and communities, I have been re-turning to a few principles […] I draw from the wisdom of leaders… and the example of the many activists who have forged a path forward in times of injustice. I have also learned from conversations with colleagues, friends, and students as we plan for immigrants’ rights advocacy in the Trump years.”

Read the Full Article
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