2027 Legal Fellow Sponsorship for

New York | Defence
Description:
Position: Legal Fellow Sponsorship

Terms of Employment: Temporary Full-Time/Exempt/Local Union 2320 (NYCLU staff is currently working in a hybrid model; a number of in-person days will be required).

Location: New York Civil Liberties Union, 125 Broad Street, New York, NY 10004

Salary: Subject to the NYCLU's attorney salary scale, which is based on years of legal experience (new law-school graduates will start at $87,000 in 2027)

Application Deadline: Sunday, June 14, 2026 (applications will be considered until the position is filled).

The New York Civil Liberties Union (NYCLU) is one of the nation's leading advocates on behalf of constitutional rights and liberties. Founded in 1951, as the New York affiliate of the American Civil Liberties Union, the NYCLU is a not-for-profit, nonpartisan organization with more than 90,000 members and supporters, and eight offices statewide. We work in the courts, in the legislatures and on the streets to advocate for racial and economic justice, free speech, freedom of religion, privacy and equality before the law for all New Yorkers. For more information, please visit our website: .

DEI VISION STATEMENT

The NYCLU is committed to building an equitable, inclusive, and anti-racist workplace that centers the voices of marginalized and directly impacted communities. This commitment strengthens our mission to protect civil liberties and advance justice across New York. We welcome candidates of all backgrounds to apply, including people of color, women, LGBTQ+ individuals, people with disabilities, formerly incarcerated people, and others whose experiences reflect the diversity of the communities we serve.

SUMMARY DESCRIPTION

The NYCLU seeks rising third-year law students, judicial clerks, and recent law graduates to sponsor for one- or two-year legal fellowships with a funding organization, such as the Skadden Fellowship Foundation, Equal Justice Works, and/or Justice Catalyst. We will work with a successful applicant to develop a project proposal to submit. Please note that the NYCLU does not have independent internal funding for these fellowships (but does cover the difference between external funding and the NYCLU salary scale).

Applicants will be asked to submit a project proposal relating to civil liberties and civil rights in New York. Proposed projects often combine litigation, policy advocacy, community outreach, and public education. We encourage projects that are new and innovative, allowing the NYCLU to serve unmet legal needs or expand our reach to new populations. 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, why you are the best candidate for this fellowship project, and how your project fits into the NYCLU's work. We understand that project proposals may be broad at this stage.

To assist candidates in developing projects that best align with our current priorities, we particularly encourage project proposals that focus on immigrants' rights. We will also consider proposals that focus on racial justice, criminal justice and police accountability, voting rights, gender equity, reproductive rights, LGBTQ rights, education equity, privacy and technology, economic justice, Indigenous justice, environmental justice, free speech, and/or projects that incorporate more than one of these areas of focus.

NYCLU staff is currently working in a hybrid model. A number of in-person days will be required.

QUALIFICATIONS

The ideal candidate should have a demonstrated commitment to public-interest law, civil liberties, and racial justice, as well as a commitment and ability to work with and support a wide range of communities and a diverse and inclusive workplace. We seek a candidate willing to collaborate with the NYCLU to shape the project proposal through the funding application process. Once the NYCLU selects its candidate, the NYCLU will work with the candidate to craft a fellowship proposal and submit application(s) to the sponsoring organization(s).

HOW TO APPLY

If you would like to be considered for sponsorship, please submit an application, including a resume, writing sample (no more than 5-10 pages), a cover letter, and a project proposal (no more than one- page, single-spaced) via



Application materials submitted as a single pdf are preferred but not required. To the extent possible, briefly indicate in your proposal how your project would also advance racial justice (e.g., by identifying, challenging, and undoing the effects and ideologies of racism). Because we are still assessing which subject areas to submit funding proposals for, please include in your cover letter whether you seek sponsorship for only your proposed project or whether you would be open to projects we suggest. Though the NYCLU will consider applications submitted after June 14, 2026, priority consideration will be given to those who submit applications by that date.

The NYCLU is an equal opportunity employer and encourages applications from all qualified individuals regardless of race, sex, gender identity or expression, age, disability, religion, national origin, citizenship, marital status, sexual orientation, veteran status, record of arrest or conviction or any other characteristic protected by applicable law.

The NYCLU is committed to providing reasonable accommodation to individuals with disabilities. If you are a qualified individual with a disability and need assistance applying online, please e-mail Director of Human Resources Lisa DeCicco at . If you are selected for an interview, you will receive additional information regarding how to request an accommodation for the interview process.

If you encounter any issues submitting your application or have specific questions about the application that are not answered in this posting, please see the FAQs below or contact Tatianna Sosa at .

Fellowship FAQs

How long are fellowships at the NYCLU?

Fellowships are limited term positions. Fellows are expected to complete either a one- or two-year term, depending on the length provided for by their external funding.

What is the external funding process like?

Selected applicants will work together with the NYCLU to develop and submit proposals for national public interest law fellowships, such as the Skadden, Equal Justice Works, or Justice Catalyst Fellowships. These fellowships typically have deadlines in early fall.

Selected applicants who are eligible for law-school specific fellowships, such as the Yale Liman Fellowship, NYU-Dedicated Post-Graduate Fellowships, Harvard Law Review Public Interest Fellowship, or University of Chicago Public Interest Law Fellowships, and similar school-sponsored fellowships, are encouraged to apply for those as well. These fellowships typically have deadlines in late winter and early spring.

External fellowship funders will generally require applicants to submit a project proposal depending on the fellowship's requirements. Proposed projects often combine legal advocacy and impact litigation, policy advocacy, community outreach, and public education. Whatever the topic, we will collaborate with the selected fellowship candidate to develop a proposal that builds on the candidate's interests and skills, ensures appropriate supervision and mentorship, fits with the NYCLU's priorities, and employs strategies most likely to be effective in advancing the project's goals. The NYCLU will collaborate with candidates to draft an application for external funding and prepare for interviews.

How many fellows does the NYCLU sponsor?

The number of fellows the NYCLU sponsors each year (between one and two fellows) depends on the specific fellowships to which applicants are applying and on space limitations. The position is contingent on a successful application to an externally funded fellowship program.

In the past, the NYCLU has agreed to sponsor candidates who we initially sponsored for EJW, Skadden, or Justice Catalyst-but were not selected-for a school-sponsored fellowship later on. We will sponsor those candidates who were not selected for organization-based funding through school-based fellowship. The school-based funding must cover most of the annual salary.

What NYCLU departments can fellows work in?

NYCLU fellows may be housed in the Legal Department, Policy Department, Education Policy Center or Racial Justice Center. Some fellows work in more than one department.

The Legal Department engages primarily in impact litigation and files lawsuits in federal and state courts in cases that raise civil liberties and civil rights issues that have potential impact on a large number of people. The Policy Department monitors legislative and policy initiatives statewide that implicate constitutional rights and liberties; drafts and supports affirmative legislation that advances constitutional freedoms, and opposes legislation, rules, and policies that would compromise those freedoms; represents the NYCLU at the state legislature in Albany; and advocates with state and local government agencies on rules and regulations . click apply for full job details
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Advertiser
New York Civil Liberties Union Foundation
Reference
3108461106
Contract Type
Expiry Date
09/06/2026 15:01:00
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