Local Attorney Seeks a Law Clerk

Cuyahoga Falls, OH – Law Clerk – Linda Malek 

Attorney Linda Malek seeks law clerk to assist with drafting motions to suppress. Preference for a 3L. The individual would need to be computer savvy on both the Mac and Desktop. Time deadlines will be an important part. Will need to be proficient in both research and writing. Compensation will be per motion and will be discussed at the time of interview.

How to apply: If interested, please submit your resume to Assist. Dean O’Brien: ab139@uakron.edu ASAP.

Deadline: January 14, 2017

University of Oklahoma-American Indian Law Writing Competition

Students are welcome to enter the University of Oklahoma’s American Indian Law Review writing competition. Papers will be accepted on any issue concerning American Indian law or indigenous peoples (although topics recently addressed in the American Indian Law Review are disfavored). The first-place winner receives $1,000 and publication in the American Indian Law Review; second place receives $500, and third place receives $250. All three winning authors will also receive an e-book copy of Cohen’s Handbook of Federal Indian Law.

Entries must be submitted or postmarked by 6:00 p.m. Eastern Standard Time on January 31, 2017. For a complete list of rules and for questions, please visit https://www.law.ou.edu/content/writing-competition.

SUMMER JUDICIAL INTERNSHIP DIVERSITY PROJECT FOR LAW STUDENTS

The Judicial Resources Committee of the United States Judicial Conference and Just The Beginning – A Pipeline Organization (JRC-JTB) are pleased to announce the sixth annual Summer Judicial Internship Diversity Project for Summer 2017 (Project).  The Project’s goal is to provide summer judicial internships for law students from communities underrepresented in the legal profession.  Operating nationally since 2011, the JRC-JTB Project has placed nearly 300 law students in successful internships to date.  Over 100 judges have participated in our efforts and look to the JRC-JTB Project for summer internship candidates.  Fifteen JRC-JTB intern alumni have secured post-graduate judicial clerkships.  The Project is national in scope and will place about 100 students as judicial interns in federal appellate, district, bankruptcy, magistrate and select state appellate judges’ chambers across the country. Interns will have the opportunity to draft bench memoranda, judicial orders, and opinions on a variety of substantive matters, including motions to dismiss, motions for summary judgment, magistrate judge reports, and habeas corpus petitions.

Applicants should possess strong research and writing skills and be prepared to handle the rigors of working in judge’s chambers.  There will be an initial screening, which will identify qualified candidates eligible for a first-round interview conducted in-person or by telephone.  Applicants who move beyond this round will be referred to one of the Project’s Participating Judges for a second-round interview, after which each Participating Judge will make a final hiring decision.  All of the application and project participation requirements are found on the application page.  Please also note that a Memorandum of Understanding must also be included in the application.

Applicants who are hired must commit to participating in two mandatory training workshops (February 2017 and April 2017) prior to the beginning of their internship, either in-person or via videoconference, and must be available to work full-time as an unpaid intern for a minimum of six weeks.

At present, this is an unpaid internship, so applicants are encouraged to seek law school or non-profit funding.  Also, applicants are strongly encouraged to apply to the ABA’s Judicial Intern Opportunity Program, which has been a source of funding for qualifying Project interns.

The application deadline is January 13, 2017 at 5:00pm Eastern and all applications must be submitted online.  No paper applications will be accepted.  Early applications are appreciated and strongly encouraged!

Law Technology Support Hours

Our hours for this week have changed due to the start of the exam period.  Below you will find our availability.  Our hours for next week will be different as well, but that schedule is not yet finalized.  Please also note that the schedule may vary due to student assistant availability.   If you need anything,  feel free to also email law-support@uakron.edu or call 330-972-5119.  Thanks!!

Law IT Hours for 12/5/16-12/9/16

Law Center:

Monday:              8:00am – 10:00pm

Tuesday:              8:00am – 10:00pm

Wednesday:      8:30am – 1:00pm and 2:30pm – 7:00pm

Thursday:            9:30am – 12:30pm and 1:00pm – 7:00pm

Friday:                  8:30am – 5:00pm

 

Central Hower:

Monday:              11:00am – 1:00pm and 2:30pm – 4:00pm

Tuesday:              1:00pm – 3:30pm and 5:00pm – 7:00pm

Wednesday:      11:00am – 1:00pm

Thursday:            1:00pm – 5:00pm

Friday:                  11:00am – 1:00pm and 2:30pm – 6:00pm

 

Quaker Square:

Monday:              n/a

Tuesday:              n/a

Wednesday:      8:00am – 11:00pm

Thursday:            8:00am – 11:00pm

Friday:                  8:00am – 11:00pm

Hill Student Writing Competition–Medical & Legal Collaboration

The Florida State University Center for Innovative Collaboration in Medicine in Law invites paper submissions for the Hill Student Writing Competition. Papers must be between 1,200 and 5,000 words (including title page, body, footnotes, figures, and tables, if any) and must respond to the following question:

There is a consensus that the U.S. health care system is frequently characterized by the excessive and unnecessary provision of medical services. One of the impediments to rationalizing medical practice to reduce tests, procedures, and treatments that are not clinically indicated and appropriate for particular patients is the perception by practicing health care professionals that the prevalent and often overused tests, procedures, and treatments are compelled by the current American legal system, and that health care professionals’ efforts to reduce the current waste and inefficiency will result in their expanded exposure to malpractice litigation and liability. Discuss the ways in which the medical and legal professions may work together collaboratively to address the problem of excessive, unnecessary, wasteful, and inefficient provision of medical services in the U.S.

The law student whose paper is selected as the outstanding law paper will receive a $250 award. Submissions are due by midnight (EST) on January 2, 2017. For more information or for questions, please visit http://med.fsu.edu/userFiles/file/2017%20Student%20Writing%20Competition.pdf.