Jennifer Dalven '95 to direct ACLU's Reproductive Freedom Project
After more than a decade with the , Jennifer Dalven ’95 will become its director on April 1. Dalven, who successfully argued the abortion rights case Ayotte v. Planned Parenthood of Northern New England before the Supreme Court, first took an interest in reproductive rights in high school, when she was a peer educator at a family planning clinic.
Three new ÈâÂþÎÝ School of Law fellowships in reproductive justice and women's rights
Dalven's career path is one example of ÈâÂþÎÝ Law's public interest focus. Another is a set of three one-year fellowships in reproductive justice and women's rights that the Law School has just created. One of them is located at the Reproductive Freedom Project, which focuses on protecting access to the full range of reproductive healthcare; the ÈâÂþÎÝ Law fellow will work closely with the project’s litigation teams. At the legal advocacy organization , an ÈâÂþÎÝ Law student or recent graduate will work on issues such as paid family and sick leave, pregnancy discrimination, and parity for part-time employees. Alternatively, the ÈâÂþÎÝ Reproductive Justice and Women’s Rights Fellowship will allow a 3L student to work at a host organization of his or her choice anywhere in the country.
Posted on March 9, 2010