Nulawlab

Nulawlab NuLawLab envisions a world where everyone is empowered to use the law.

NuLawLab Partnerships and Projects

NuLawLab and Northeastern law students will join forces with artists and worker-led coalitions to produce a public art and advocacy initiative designed to educate Massachusetts domestic workers about their rights. Spearheaded by REV-, with partners including NuLawLab, the MIT Center for Civic Media, the National Domestic Workers Alliance, and other advocates and

allies nationwide, this project aims to provide workers and parents with tools to support the growing national movement for domestic worker justice. In 2011, the School of Law convened the Alliance for Experiential Learning in Law, a network of over 150 educators from more than 90 law schools with a shared interest in initiating new approaches and programs for curriculum reform in order to change the way lawyers are educated. In October, 2012, the School of Law and the Northeastern University Law Journal hosted “Experience the Future: Inaugural National Symposium on Experiential Education in Law.” The symposium was informed by the contributions of the Alliance for Experiential Learning in Law's working groups focused on addressing critical challenges in legal education and the profession. The NuLawLab provides ongoing administrative support to, and facilitates activities of, the Alliance. In 2012, the School of Law and the NuLawLab launched the Outcomes Assessment Project (OAP) — combining rigorous social science research with principles of change management to provide critical insights on how to better integrate experiential education into the law school curriculum. Equally important, the OAP will give the legal academy and profession a more realistic, evidence-based analysis of what works and what doesn’t, resulting in models for how to best allocate resources in the years ahead. Design Thinking and Other Tools
The NuLawLab applies a variety of structured creative processes, including “design thinking” — a term coined by David Kelley, founder of California-based design firm IDEO and Stanford’s d.school — to describe a process that brings together what is desirable from a human point of view with what is technologically feasible and economically viable. It allows those who are not trained as designers to use creative tools to address a vast range of challenges. In short, it aims to make institutions and programs more responsive to human needs and, therefore, more successful. The NuLawLab is employing these creative processes to explore issues as essential as curriculum reform and its assessment, professional development, organizational and economic structuring, community interaction and access, and communication among constituencies. The NuLawLab encourages individuals and institutions to participate flexibly, collaborate broadly, experiment thoughtfully, innovate boldly, think creatively and, ultimately, transform legal education and practice.

11/22/2023
04/15/2023

Will a “civic tech” boomlet in the Bay State bring us a better online politics?

02/15/2023

What is the future for ?
At HiiL, we believe in supporting startups from the justice sector that offer solutions to people's justice needs. This is a core part of people-centred justice.

Over the past decade, we have supported 150+ justice startups throughout the world. We have worked with entrepreneurs who are data-driven, evidence based, and are focused on creating change in their communities and beyond. These game-changing startups are driving people-centred justice and are impacting people’s lives by solving their most pressing justice issues.

This is why we run the Justice Accelerator programme and are proud to present our 2022 Justice startups at .

On February 15th, we’ll award the top prize to the best justice sector innovation of the past year.
📺 Tune in: https://www.hiil.org/our-events/justice-accelerator-demo-day-2023/

02/14/2023

Please use this form to register* for the a2ru/Imagining America collaborative webinar "Artists and Scholars Changing Culture, Creating Change: Findings from an Imagining America Research Initiative." The webinar will take place on Zoom Thursday, February 23 from 3:00-4:30pm Eastern/noon-1:30pm Paci...

02/13/2023

Jean Camper Cahn was a true visionary for legal services in Connecticut and the nation. Originally from Baltimore, Cahn attended Yale Law School. She was a staff attorney at Neighborhood Legal Service in New Haven, which was the predecessor to what we now know as New Haven Legal Assistance! She also served as associate general counsel for the New Haven Redevelopment Agency. Cahn and her husband, Edgar Cahn, co-authored a Yale Law Journal article, “The War on Poverty: A Civilian Perspective,” which proposed a national system of legal services to the poor.” This would spark the establishment of the Legal Services Corporation (LSC). In 1964, Cahn moved to Washington DC. Cahn to become the first director of the National Legal Services Program in the Office of Economic Opportunity, and later she founded the Urban Law Institute at George Washington University. In 1972, the Cahns founded the Antioch School of Law which emphasized public interest law. The school used a clinic education model to train its students. Mrs. Cahn continued to teach and to practice law. In 1984 she was a distinguished visiting professor at Middlebury College in Vermont, and in 1986 she was a distinguished visiting scholar at the London School of Economics.


02/10/2023

Joseph Feaster is and the chair of the task force. He speaks with WBUR's Morning Edition host Rupa Shenoy about the group, its scope and the case for reparation.

02/10/2023

DEADLINE EXTENDED: You now have until February 14 to submit to "Creating Knowledge in Common," the latest special issue of Ground Works, our award-winning online journal. The issue, focused on university-community partnered inquiry, is guest-edited by Shannon Criss of The University of Kansas and Kevin Hamilton and Mary Pat McGuire of University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. https://groundworks.io/proposals/3/home_show

12/03/2022

This is the story of a diverse group of Syrians who decided to put their differences aside to achieve one goal: help the people of Syria solve their daily most pressing justice problems.

03/29/2021

Super Work Marisa Jahn!

Congratulations Marisa Jahn!!!
03/29/2021

Congratulations Marisa Jahn!!!

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