Attorneys are asked to provide legal services to fulfill their pro bono obligations. However, law students are not yet lawyers and therefore cannot directly perform legal services for clients, except under appropriate supervision. Law-related services is a term designed to encompass all the ways that law students can assist in legal matters while stopping short of directly performing unsupervised legal services for a client. This term can include:
- Work for clients that is law-related, but not the direct provision of legal services such as helping someone to fill out forms such as tax forms, forms to obtain a government benefit or other forms related to a legal process or legal requirement.
- Work to assist an attorney in client representation including legal research, document drafting, and trial preparation.
- Helping an organization by doing legislative analysis.
- Preparing materials to teach high school students about an area of the law.
- Work to improve the legal system through a change in the law.
These are only a few examples of the meaning of law-related that are designed to indicate the breadth of the term. The term does not include clerical services, charitable efforts including collecting food and clothing for those in need, and public service projects such as home building, food service, and other worthy projects.
After you have completed one semester of law school.
You must complete your pro bono service by March 8 for students graduating in May.
The limit is 3 placements. The limit on the number of placements is based on the fact that students who perform only a few hours of pro bono service at a large number of placements are not likely to obtain all of the benefits intended by the pro bono requirement. A larger number of hours at fewer placements are more likely to provide the student with significant experience as well as maximize the utility of the student’s effort to those the student is serving. It is expected that many students will serve all of the 20 hours at a single placement, but this is not necessary to satisfy the requirement.
No, there is no geographic restriction. The only requirement is that the placement be pre-approved by the Office of Career Services. Make sure to make your pre-approval request as early as possible so that the placement is pre-approved prior to the time you begin your work.
The critical question is the nature of the work you perform. While you can receive credit in certain circumstances for work performed at a private law firm, a government agency, a legislative office, a nonprofit organization, a legal service organization, and other types of placements, you can only qualify for pro bono credit if the nature of the service you provide falls within the definition of law-related pro bono service.
Government service can fulfill the pro bono requirement if the objectives of the service fall within the definition of pro bono. In addition, since you are not receiving a salary or credit for your work, you have satisfied those two requirements for pro bono service. However, as with all pro bono placements, you will need to obtain pre-approval from the Office of Career Services. It is likely that you will receive such approval since you are working in the Public Protection and Advocacy Bureau. The work of this Bureau will probably fall within the category of a governmental organization seeking to secure or protect civil rights, civil liberties or public rights.
If you receive a salary or academic credit you cannot receive pro bono credit no matter what kind of work you are doing. If you are not receiving a salary or credit, it depends on the kind of work you are doing. If the attorney is handling a case pro bono for a client of limited means and you are also working on that case, the hours you work on the client’s case can be counted for pro bono credit. However, if the work is for a fee-paying client or a client who does not have limited means, you cannot receive credit. Fee paying means the payment of the attorney for the attorney’s time. It can still be pro bono service if the client pays costs such as court filing fees, but does not compensate the attorney for his or her time.
No. Assisting a judge with cases assigned to the judge (doing research and writing draft opinions) does not fall within the definition of pro bono service. If the judge is working on a law reform project, however, hours devoted to work on the law reform project could fall within the definition of pro bono service. Such work could fall within category (5) of the definition of pro bono service because it is an “activity for improving access to the law, improving the legal system or improving the legal profession.” As with all other pro bono service, pre-approval from the Office of Career Services will be necessary.
No. Volunteering in a prosecutor’s office does not fall within the definition of pro bono service. There may be situations where a prosecutor is working on a specific project that falls within the definition of pro bono service. The Office of Career Services is happy to discuss whether a particular project qualifies for pro bono credit.