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CALL FOR APPLICANTS FOR FELLOW SPONSORSHIP ACLU OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
The American Civil Liberties Union of the District of Columbia (ACLU-DC) seeks a law student or recent law school graduate to sponsor as an Equal Justice Works Justice Catalyst Soros or other externally-funded (including law school funded) public service fellowship candidate for the fall 2025 application process. The fellowship itself would begin in fall 2026 so the applicant must graduate no later than summer 2026. The ACLU-DC has been successful in the past in hosting legal fellows with externally-funded public service fellowships.
The ACLU-DC is an affiliate office of the American Civil Liberties Union a national nonprofit organization devoted to the protection of civil liberties and civil rights through litigation legislation organizing and public education. The ACLU-DC works primarily on issues that directly impact people who live in work in and visit the District of Columbia and also on challenges to certain federal government policies and practices where they fall within the jurisdiction of the D.C. federal courts.
Among the matters currently on our docket are: representing Black Lives Matter-DC and individual activists in challenging the attack by federal and local law enforcement on civil rights demonstrators in Lafayette Square on June 1 2020; a challenge to the D.C. governments practice of warehousing children who have been adjudicated delinquent in a jail-like detention facility instead of promptly transferring them to the rehabilitative placements to which they are entitled by law; a lawsuit seeking to reform the Districts practice of sending police and not trained mental health professionals to respond to individuals experiencing mental health crises; the representation of two D.C. agency workers who faced discrimination based on their family responsibilities (child care) in the application of remote work policies; a challenge to the D.C. police departments practice of retaining arrestees cell phones for months or years after the owners are released or charges are dropped; a hostile work environment case on behalf of a D.C. Jail officer subjected to harassment and abuse based on his sexual orientation; and ten cases against policies and practices of the second Trump administrationfive regarding immigration two on trans rights one voting rights one about family planning funding and a series of administrative complaints about the purge of federal workers associated with DEI. (Please note that our fellows tend to focus more on our cases challenging D.C. policies and practices than federal.)
To learn more about our work visit .
NATURE OF FELLOWSHIP
TheACLU-DC seeks rising third-year law students judicial clerks and law school graduates to sponsor for
externally-funded one- or two-year legal fellowships. We will work with a successful applicant to develop a project proposal to submit to funding organizations. Please note that the ACLU-DC does not have independent internal funding for this fellowship position; we seek to host an externally-funded fellow only.
Applicants will be asked to submit ideas for a project proposal relating to civil liberties and civil rights in Washington D.C. Proposed projects often combine impact litigation policy advocacy and public education.
Proposals should include a short description of the problem your project seeks to address concrete strategies and tools to address the problem goals for what you want to accomplish during the fellowship and why you are the best candidate for this fellowship project. We understand that project proposals may be broad at this stage.
Likelihood of obtaining funding will be a consideration (so for instance having access to additional school-based funding opportunities would be advantageous).
Past legal fellows have had the opportunity to develop their own cases and serve as lead counsel testify before the D.C. Council conduct Know Your Rights trainings take depositions argue in court and speak on behalf of the ACLU-DC to national and local media outlets.
We will supplement the amount of the fellowship stipend so that the fellow will receive a salary of no less than $70000 per year. Benefits currently provided to all ACLU-DC employees (including externally-funded fellows) include employer-paid health insurance vacation and sick leave and 401(k) availability with employer match.
QUALIFICATIONS
TO APPLY
The deadline for applying is 11:59pm Eastern time on Sunday July 6 2025 but our evaluation of candidates is rolling so earlier submission is advantageous. To apply complete the application at If you require accommodation(s) to complete the application please email.
Please submit:
The ACLU-DC is an equal opportunity employer. We value a diverse workforce and an inclusive culture. The ACLU-DC encourages applications from all qualified individuals without regard to race color religion sex sexual orientation gender identity and expression age national origin marital status citizenship disability veteran status or any other classification protected by the D.C. Human Rights Act or federal employment law.
If you have a disability and need a reasonable accommodation regarding any part of the application process please include your accommodation request(s) in your application email. We are responsive to reasonable accommodation requests at any point during the application process.
Full-Time