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Comparative Criminal Justice Clinic:
Focus on Domestic Violence
L02.2503/2504
Professor Holly Maguigan
Professor Shamita Das Dasgupta
Open to 3L, 2L and LL.M. students*
Maximum of 12-15 students |
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Spring semester
7 credits**
No prerequisites or co-requisites (see "Qualifications
for Applicants" below)
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Introduction
The Comparative Criminal Justice Clinic offers students the opportunity (1) to compare and contrast different nations' use of criminal prosecution to combat domestic violence, (2) to develop a critical analysis of the advantages and limitations of different criminal justice strategies, and (3) to assist lawyers, agencies and community-based organizations working to devise and implement changes in those strategies.
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Course Description
Seminar
Domestic violence occurs everywhere, with different resonances in different cultures. Every country has a criminal justice system, but the attempt to use arrest and prosecution as tools against domestic violence is far from universal. Within each nation where domestic violence is prosecuted, there is debate about whether a criminal-court approach will ever make more than a marginal difference. This debate, examined in a comparative and interdisciplinary context, is the focus of the weekly seminar. Specific areas of inquiry will include mandatory arrest, prosecutorial discretion, no-drop policies, and mandatory reporting to law enforcement by health care providers. The main points of comparison will be India and the United States.
Fieldwork
All fieldwork placements will be in New York City. They include criminal defense offices, advocacy organizations, community-based organizations and, occasionally, governmental offices. Every student will have client contact and responsibility, and the placements will offer opportunities ranging from direct representation of an individual to provision of advice to an agency on policy and strategy issues. In Spring 2008 students worked on criminal defense teams in Manhattan and Brooklyn with lawyers at the Legal Aid Society and in private practice. Students on the civil side worked with attorneys at the following community-based organizations: Sanctuary for Families, Connect, Urban Justice Center, and Safe Horizon. Students should plan on spending 12-20 hours a week on fieldwork (3-5 hours per credit).
"A" Writing Credit
Students who plan to fulfill this writing requirement through the course should meet with Professor Maguigan once during the Fall 2008 semester. Call her at (212) 998-6433 or email holly.maguigan@nyu.edu to arrange an appointment.
Qualifications for Applicants This course is open to second-year and third-year J.D. students, to LL.M. students, and to M.S.W. and Ph.D. candidates at SIlver School of Social Work. There are no prerequisites, but students will find it helpful to have academic training or practical experience in one or more of the following areas: criminal procedure, comparative or international law, evidence, domestic violence counseling, advocacy, litigation or policy, and interdisciplinary work. Law students who wish to work in the area of criminal defense should have taken criminal procedure and evidence.
Application Procedure
Interested students should submit an application, resume and grade transcript through CAMS. Students will be selected on the basis of their applications and interviews with faculty. Current CCJ students are available to answer questions: Hanna Abrams, Camilo Becdach, Kristen Berg, Binish Hasan, Claire Inder, Matt Melville, Cory Mescon, Sabrina Miesowitz, Hiroko Nakamura, Danielle Posen.
Places are reserved for transfer and LL.M. students. Their application deadline is October 15, 2008. Applicants should download the application form from the clinic website and email it with a resume and an informal transcript to holly.maguigan@nyu.edu.
For more information about the clinic, please contact Professor Shamita Das Dasgupta at shamita.dasgupta@nyu.edu, Professor Maguigan at (212) 998-6433 or holly.maguigan@nyu.edu, or former students listed above. You can also contact the clinic administrator Damaris Marrero, at 212-998-6473, or at damaris.marrero@nyu.edu. Ms. Marrero will schedule the interviews.
* This clinic is also
open to M.S.W. and Ph.D. candidates at the Silver School of
Social Work.
** 7 credits includes 4 clinical credits and 3 academic seminar credits.
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