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Center for Law and Social Justice

Past Events

Feb. 15-16, 2008: The Global Workplace: Expanding Intellectual Borders with International & Comparative Workplace Law Conference.



Professor Susan Bisom-Rapp, DirectorProfessor Susan Bisom-Rapp, Director

The Center for Law and Social Justice promotes research and teaching in areas of public policy and law relating to civil rights, civil liberties, international human rights, and equal access to justice. In particular, the Center addresses the continuing effort to preserve and define the fundamental values of liberty and equality in a constantly changing world.

The Center runs two important programs. First, it provides a platform for bringing to the law school distinguished speakers whose own scholarly and legal practice work relates to social justice concerns. Speakers have addressed a wide array of topics in recent years from the rights of detainees at Guantanamo Bay to workers’ fragile right of association in a post-9/11 world to the social justice implications of the federal sentencing guidelines.

Also within the Center’s jurisdiction is a program that leads to granting a Certificate in Law and Social Justice to those students interested in specializing in the area. Students must fulfill a number of requirements including: completing an enrollment form; CLSJ Enrollment ; participating and documenting their attendance at the Center’s events; Event Attendance Log ; rendering 10 hours of pro bono service to individuals or organizations of limited means; completing 12 elective units; and maintaining the Center’s required GPA. A concise summary of the Center’s requirements is available. CLSJ requirements.

The Center's Certificate Program endeavors to educate students in the fundamental values of the American legal system to prepare them to counsel and represent clients in the full range of settings in which questions relating to the cause of social justice arise. Such settings may include, for example, allegations of employment discrimination, claims for equal treatment by gays, lesbians and intersexuals, conflicting assertions of privacy rights in disputes over frozen embryos, or objections to the location of an environmental hazard in a minority community.

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Important Documents/Forms:

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Courses

  • Access to Civil Justice Seminar 
  • Administrative Law
  • Advanced Constitutional Law
  • Advanced Criminal Procedure
  • American Indian Law (formerly Federal Indian Law)
  • American Legal History
  • Bioethics
  • California Criminal Procedure
  • Civil Rights Law
  • Constitutional Litigation
  • Criminal Motion Practice
  • Critical Race Theory
  • Death Penalty Law
  • Elder Law
  • Employment Discrimination Law
  • Employment Law
  • Environmental Law
  • Family Law
  • Family Violence Law
  • Federal Courts and Jurisdiction
  • Federal Criminal Law
  • Federal Indian Law (see American Indian Law)
  • Federal Sentencing
  • Gender, Sexuality, and the Law (see Sexuality, Gender, and the Law)
  • Globalization and the Workplace
  • Health Care Liability
  • Health Law
  • Immigration Law
  • International Criminal Law
  • International Environmental Law
  • International Human Rights Law
  • International Labor and Employment Law
  • International Influences of Death Penalty Law
  • International Trade and Developing Countries
  • Jurisprudence
  • Juvenile Dependency Law
  • Labor Law
  • Law and Film
  • Law and Literature
  • Law and the Political Process
  • Law and Religion
  • Law, Equality and Educational Institutions
  • Law of Democracy
  • Media Law
  • National Security Law
  • Native Americans and the Law (see American Indian Law)
  • Natural Resources and Endangered Species
  • Public Interest Law
  • Race and the Law
  • Refugee and Asylum Law
  • Sexual Orientation and the Law
  • Sexuality, Gender, and the Law
  • Street Law
  • Veterans Legal Assistance Clinic
  • Women and International Human Rights
  • Women and the Law

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Faculty Research

Current or recent faculty research relating to the work of the Center for Law and Social Justice includes topics such as:

  • intersexuals and the definition of gender
  • the location of environmental hazards in minority communities
  • constitutional defenses for alternative lifestyles
  • the conflict between religious freedom and open housing laws
  • the use of litigation prevention measures in employment discrimination cases
  • same sex marriages and free speech
  • religious defenses to allegations of terrorism
  • feminist perspectives on the law

Click here to view the faculty scholarship

The Center's Library Collection

New titles were added to the Center's collection every month.
Click here view the PDF for the list of new titles.


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