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Postgraduate Fellowships

Postgraduate Fellowships: Overview

Columbia public interest students do very well when it come to receiving highly selective fellowships. They usually are among the few who are selected for positions in the Department of Justice Honors Program, prestigious clerkships, and other highly competitive public interest jobs throughout the United States and the world. In addition, successful Columbia graduates and faculty and their firms, families, and friends have demonstrated that public interest law is at the core of the Law School's values by creating fellowships that allow other Columbia graduates to pursue public interest careers. Fellowships allow graduates do public interest work in the United States or abroad. Back to top

Fellowships for Columbia Graduates

HUMAN RIGHTS FELLOWSHIP

  • The David W. Leebron Human Rights Fellowship honors the Law School's former Dean (1996-2004) and his commitment to providing meaningful experiences in human rights law.  This annual Fellowship will enable a Columbia Law School graduate to spend one year working in human rights either in the United States or abroad, in pursuit of a career in human rights law, whether in academic life; in governmental, intergovernmental or nongovernmental organizations or agencies; or as legal practitioners specializing in human rights work.

David W. Leebron Human Rights Fellowship application

  • Human Rights Watch, a leading international human rights monitoring and advocacy organization, has created the Sandler Fellowship for a Columbia Law graduate from the JD program in honor of Judge Leonard Sandler ’50.  The Fellow will spend one year in either the New York City or Washington DC office monitoring human rights developments in various countries, conducting on-site investigations, drafting reports on human rights conditions, and engaging in advocacy aimed at publicizing and curtailing human rights violations.

Sandler Fellowship Information and Application Procedures

DOMESTIC PUBLIC INTEREST FELLOWSHIPS

  • Chadbourne & Parke/The Door Legal Services Center sponsors a fellow to work on-site at The Door for a period of approximately 16 months. Located in SoHo, The Door is New York's premier youth development agency, and serves young people, aged 12-21 year, primarily from low-income families.  Application deadline is Friday, October 9 at 3:00 p.m. at SJP/CPIL.  The application consists of a cover letter, resume and transcript (either official or unofficial).

Chadbourne &Parke/The Door

  • Neufeld Scheck & Brustin, LLP a public interest law firm in New York City, offers an exclusive two-year Cochran Civil Rights Fellowship to a Columbia Law graduate to litigate civil rights and constitutional cases that promote systemic reforms in police departments and other large private and public institutions throughout the United States.

Cochran Civil Rights Fellowship application

  • Goldstein, Demchak, Baller, Borgen & Dardarian, a civil rights law firm in Oakland, California, offers a two-year fellowship exclusively to a Columbia Law graduate to litigate plaintiffs' complex class-action cases, including employment discrimination, wage and hour disputes, and disability access cases.

GDBBD Fellowship application

  • Kirkland & Ellis offers the Kirkland & Ellis New York City Public Service Fellowship to "give something back" to the community and to enhance its relationship with Columbia Law School. The Fellowship provides one Columbia student the opportunity for a year of postgraduate public service that meets serious human needs in New York City.

K & E Information and Application Procedures

Brochure on the Kirkland & Ellis Fellowship

  • Equal Justice America offers a 2-year legal services fellowship to a Columbia Law graduate to work with a civil legal assistance program serving low-income communities anywhere in the United States. Offered every other year beginning 2008.
    *This fellowship is not offered in 2010. More information will be available next year.*
     
  • The Center for Reproductive Rights and Columbia Law School offer a two-year, post-graduate fellowship designed to prepare recent law school graduates for legal aca­demic careers in reproductive health and human rights. Fellows will be affiliated with the Center and the Law School and will participate in the intellectual life of both programs. The CRR-CLS Fellowship is a full-time, residential fellowship for up to two full years starting in July 2010.

CRR/CLS Fellowship Application

 

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Guides to Applying for Fellowships

POSTGRADUATE FELLOWSHIPS

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Public Service LRAP Fellowships

PUBLIC SERVICE LRAP FELLOWSHIPS

Public Service LRAP Fellowships are awarded to students who have demonstrated dedication to and exceptional promise for leadership in public interest law. These fellowships cover all loans up to the cost of law school tuition for Fellows whose annual income does not exceed $100,000, and the schedule of forgiveness is accelerated beyond that of the typical LRAP arrangement.

Currently four types of fellowships are available: Lowenstein Fellowships, endowed by a faculty member, are designated for at least four incoming students each year. Dean's Public Interest Fellows are designed for two incoming students each year. Bernstein Litowitz Berger & Grossman LLP Fellowships, from the law firm of the same name, are granted to a graduate pursuing anti-discrimination work, as is the Berger Fellowship. Strine Fellowships are granted to a graduate pursuing Native American law.

  • Lowenstein Enhanced LRAP Fellowship
    Endowed by Professor Louis Lowenstein and his wife Helen, at least four fellowships per year are awarded to outstanding graduates pursuing any type of public interest law.
  • Berger LRAP Fellowship
    Endowed by Max W. Berger ’71 and Dale Berger, one fellowship is awarded to a graduate pursuing anti-discrimination work. This fellowship will be offered in 2008.
     
  • Bernstein LRAP Fellowship
    The Bernstein Litowitz Berger & Grossmann LLP Fellowship (Bernstein Fellowship) will be awarded to one Columbia Law School graduate who whose career and first post-graduate job (other than a judicial clerkship) will be substantially devoted to using the law to fight racial, gender and/or other discrimination. This fellowship will be offered in 2009.

 

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