Skip to content

Learn More: Contact OPIA with any questions: opia@law.harvard.edu

Working One-on-One With Clients at Catholic Charities

Lerae Kroon spent last summer working at Catholic Charities Archdiocese of New York in the Immigration Office. This department provides legal consultations and direct representation to immigrants living in New York City. When she started her job search, Lerae knew that she wanted to spend her summer directly representing clients.

Alumni in Action: Profiles of Heyman Fellows

Read about two recent HLS alums, Ariane Tschumi and Neha Sheth, and the exciting work they're involved in within the federal government. Tschumi and Sheth are both Heyman Fellows, a program at HLS that seeks to encourage HLS graduates to pursue careers in federal government.

Summer Planning With an Eye Toward the Future: Building Skills with the U.N.

Sam Birnbaum left home far behind when he went to Thailand to spend the summer working for the United Nations Inter-Agency Project on Human Trafficking. Landing in Thailand, Sam got acquainted with the office, which is small and diverse—with only 15-20 people in the UN compound in Thailand and only about 50 across Southeast Asia, every member of the community can quickly feel at home.

A View on Policy Work at the White House

Robin Lipp is in his third year as a JD/MPP student here at Harvard, and spent last summer working at the White House Office of Management and Budget (OMB). Robin had worked for the New York City Law Department the previous summer, and wanted to get more of a policy oriented experience in his second summer (next summer, he hopes to combine the two, possibly through a legal position within a policy oriented non-profit or government office).

Protecting Disability Rights at the Department of Justice

During the summer of 2012, Stephanie Berger, current 3L, worked for ten weeks at the Disability Rights Section of the DOJ Civil Rights Division. The primary job of the Disability Rights Section is to enforce the American with Disabilities Act (ADA) and use the ADA to expand civil rights.

Tackling Human Rights and Prisoner Issues at Reprieve

As a 1L, Alexandra Gliga knew she was interested in the impact of the war on terror on individual rights. In her second semester, she had an incredible time in Professor Feldman’s 1L class on Constitutional Law and the International Order, which discussed Supreme Court cases related to Guantanamo and habeas corpus issues.

Alumni in Action: Former Heyman Fellow Daniel Grooms '02

Daniel Grooms knew early on during his time at HLS that he wanted to work in public service, and specifically work in the federal government. Through the Heyman Fellowship Program , he was able to get his start. As he says in this great profile in the Washington Post, he "hasn't looked back since."

Bryan Stevenson - a talk on injustice

In Bryan Stevenson's recent TED Conference talk, he provides some incredible insights on his own personal history, and also tackles larger issues of mass incarceration, racial divides and disparities.

Ken Zimmerman (HLS, 1988), Picked to Head Open Society Insitute's U.S. Programs

Ken Zimmerman, HLS class of 1988, has been picked to head Open Society Institute's U.S. Programs, where he will oversee the direction of U.S. programs that handle over $100 million in grants annually. Ken was previously with the firm Lowenstein Sandler where he was a Member of the Litigation Group and Chair of the Lowenstein Center for the Public Interest.

Beginning a Career in Criminal Defense

The summer before coming to HLS, 3L Ieshaah Murphy was an intern investigator at the Public Defender Service in Washington, D.C. The experience of working…

Justice Reform with the Center for Court Innovation

Nina Catalano, 3L, spent the summer of 2011 at the Center for Court Innovation (CCI), an organization that conducts research and development for the court system. The principle location is in midtown New York, although it does have smaller offices in Albany and London. CCI closely resembles the work of the Vera Institute, and the two of them often collaborate.

Election Reform in Sierra Leone

Jason Gelbort, a 2L and dual degree student with Fletcher, spent his summer working with lawyers in Sierra Leone. He found the placement through the U.S. NGO International Professional Partnership for Sierra Leone, who then arranged a placement in the Sierra Leonean government for him with the Law Reform Commission (LRC).

Exploring Democracy and Human Rights with the ACLU

Matthew Spurlock, ’12, spent his 2L summer working at the American Civil Liberties Union’s Center for Democracy in New York City. The Center for Democracy is a branch of the ACLU that works to “strengthen democratic values, promote human rights and ensure government accountability.” It includes the National Security Project, the Human Rights Program and the Speech, Privacy and Technology Project. The work that summer interns received was largely confined to a few specific, minute issues within the department to which they were assigned. Matthew described the work as 20% case briefs, and 80% legal research and writing.

Documenting Human Rights Violations in Afghanistan

Nicolette Boehland, ’13, came to law school with an interest in human rights and experience working in conflict zones. During her 1L year, she pursued this interest by working with the Human Rights Clinic as a research assistant and taking public international law during her spring term. It all came together when she landed her 1L summer internship with the Afghanistan Independent Human Rights Commission.