The Child Protection Clinic: A Mixed Method Evaluation of Parent Legal Representation Haight, Marshall & Woolman (2015) Children and Youth Services Review, 56 Evaluates a law school clinic that provides indigent parents with legal representation by law students
supervised by experienced attorneys.
Not exact matches
At a City Council hearing on criminal discovery practices in February chaired
by Queens councilman Rory Lancman, Sergio de la Pava, a
supervising attorney for New York County Defender Services who has been representing indigent defendants in Manhattan for over 20 years, described a typical
experience in the borough's courtrooms: After waiting six months or a year for trial, he said, «The DA comes in with a cart and drops about six inches of material on your desk.
But none of those hours and
experience counts toward the accumulated LLLT hour requirement because I am not «
supervised by an
attorney» for Title 11 work.»
While there is no absolute bar to suing a school when its employees fail in their duty to properly
supervise students and provide a safe environment, any matter involving an injury at a school should be evaluated
by an
experienced personal injury
attorney to determine its merits.
By Ed Finkel.Interviewing clients, meeting their families, filing affidavits, and attending hearings with
supervising attorneys on various matters were all part of Katherine Klein's hands - on educational
experience.
In the Clinic, students serve as the lead
attorney,
supervised by an
experienced lawyer, representing leading conservation organizations and local community groups to promote access to justice on important environmental issues.