For those 78,400 Californians who spend nights on streets, in parks, in vehicles, the struggle to access toilets and clean water for drinking and bathing is central to daily life.
Sandra Lupien M.P.P. ’18: Empathy as advocacy
Heather Jones ’19: How I learned to stop worrying and love economics
I learned many things in [the clinic], but loving the study of economics was not one of them. Instead … I learned to embrace both my role as a translator of complex material to an administrative agency and the general public and to embrace ambiguity and uncertainty in complex public policy issues.
Daniel Lopez ’19: The barriers to decision-making
If you told me after my sophomore year in college, that I would voluntarily sign up for a project in law school that required economic research, I would have thought you were crazy.
Cristina de la Paz LL.M. ’19: Clinic’s role in your legal education
Being away on your LL.M. may make you feel like you are getting rusty with the rudimentary “lawyer” work. Clinic is your way back, behind the computer, typing ferociously for your client.
Samuelson Law, Technology & Public Policy 2017 Newsletter
Samuelson Clinic, 11/17
New Report Faults California’s Electronic Monitoring of Youth
Berkeley Law, 7/11/17
Study Finds Juvenile Electronic Monitors Burdensome
KION546 News, 7/12/17
New Report Says Electronic Monitoring For Youth Sets Kids Up For Failure
Witness LA, 7/17/17
Electronic Monitoring Isn’t Kid-Friendly
Sacramento Bee, 7/17/17
Report Raises Alarm About GPS Monitors for Probation Youth
Imprint, 7/14/17