Animal Law Clinic II
NOTE: Part II of a year-long course. The course description is the same as LAW-788 Animal Law Clinic I
Animal Law Clinic II
- Course Number: LAW-789
- Course Type: Highly Specialized & Experiential
- Credits: 3
- Enrollment Limit: 8
- Description: The Animal Law Clinic serves as a comprehensive training ground for JD and Animal Law LLM students interested in policy, administrative, and transactional work that benefits animals through the representation of clients. The Clinic will provide critical opportunities for students to gain real-world experience working with and on behalf of clients, as well as to hone their professional and lawyering skills. Clinic students should expect to undertake rigorous legal research, analysis, and writing projects that will benefit animals and further develop the field of animal law. Broadly, projects undertaken by Clinic students will implicate legislative, administrative, policy-related, and transactional legal issues, research intended to support litigation brought by others, advocacy, negotiation, mediation, practical legal ethics, strategic advocacy, and more. Where appropriate, students should expect to work with diverse stakeholder groups, including but not limited to animal advocacy organizations, attorneys, scientists, community leaders, veterinarians, and economists, among others.
Students participate in a weekly two-hour class covering substantive issues and lawyering skills, meet weekly with Clinic faculty to discuss their work, and spend an average of ten hours per week on Clinic work.
Students must also enroll in Animal Law Clinic I when it is offered in the same academic year.
Interested JD students must submit this application form by May 15th to be considered.
- Prerequisite or Corequisite: Animal Law Fundamentals and Animal Law Clinic I
- Evaluation Method: Credit/no credit based on written work completed in the course
- Capstone: No
- WIE: Depends; Professor consent is needed.
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The American Bar Association accreditation standards require students to regularly attend the courses in which they are registered. Lewis & Clark expects students to attend classes regularly and to prepare for classes conscientiously. Specific attendance requirements may vary from course to course. Any attendance guidelines for a given class must be provided to students in a syllabus or other written document at the start of the semester. Sanctions (e.g., required withdrawal from the course, grade adjustment, and/or a failing grade) will be imposed for poor attendance.
Law Registrar is located in Legal Research Center on the Law Campus.
MSC: 51
email lawreg@lclark.edu
voice 503-768-6614
fax 503-768-6850
Registrar Tiffany Henning
Law Registrar
Lewis & Clark Law School
10101 S. Terwilliger Boulevard MSC 51
Portland OR 97219