Completed

Transgender Health § 1557 Project

Seeking attorneys from law firms and in-house legal departments to research state-level laws that either expand or contract protections for transgender and non-binary health. The research generated through this project will allow advocates to target comments about the administration’s proposed rulemaking to frontline states and to develop model policies to increase these protections. We estimate that each state will take 2 - 3 hours of work. Deadline is September 12, 2022.

Lawyers for Racial Justice: Shackling of Pregnant Incarcerated Individuals

Seeking attorneys from law firms and in-house legal departments to research state-level laws permitting shackling of pregnant incarcerated individuals. The research generated through this project will allow us to produce model legislation. We estimate that each state will take 1 - 2 hours of work. Deadline is March 10, 2022.

Right to Water in Michigan - Document Review

Seeking 5 attorneys to review and analyze documents from a FOIA response to determine how and why the Benton Harbor, Michigan Water Crisis took place and to ensure the infrastructure is fixed as quickly as possible. We estimate that the work will take about 20 hours per attorney. Deadline is January 31, 2022.

Sentencing for Felony Crimes

Seeking attorneys from law firms and in-house legal departments to research state-level law regarding criminal felony sentencing. The research generated through this project will be incorporated into every future Lawyers for Racial Justice report where a current or potential criminal charge is relevant. We estimate that each state will take 1-2 hours of work. Deadline is January 10, 2022.

Sentencing for Misdemeanor Crimes

Seeking attorneys from law firms and in-house legal departments to research state-level law regarding criminal misdemeanor sentencing. The research generated through this project will be incorporated into every future Lawyers for Racial Justice report where a current or potential criminal charge is relevant. We estimate that each state will take 1-2 hours of work. Deadline is January 10, 2022.

Juvenile Solitary Confinement: Part 2

Seeking attorneys from law firms and in-house legal departments to research state-level law where solitary confinement for juveniles is authorized for non-punitive reasons. The research generated through this project will allow us to produce model legislation. We estimate that each state will take 3 - 4 hours of work. Deadline is December 20, 2021

Lawyers for Racial Justice: State Laws on Corporal Punishment in Public Schools

Seeking law firms and in-house legal teams to research state-level code and/or case law regarding the use of corporal punishment in public schools. The research produced through this project will allow us to produce a report that will enable advocates or legislators to easily draft legislation to forbid the use of corporal punishment. We estimate that the full project will take 50 - 100 hours of work, but it can be broken up between multiple pro bono partners.

Lawyers for Racial Justice: Agricultural Child Labor Project (Phase 2)

[22 projects remaining, roughly 25-30 hours each] Seeking law firms and/or in-house legal teams to assist with the second phase of a 50-state research project regarding state law on agricultural child labor. We estimate that each assignment will take 25-30 hours, and request that the projects be completed by April 15.

State Legislative Research Project

Seeking law firms and in-house legal teams to research state-level legislation that has been drafted or proposed during the last full legislative session in each state, whether passed or not, and answering a number of questions about it so that the approach of different states regarding different topics can be compared and synthesized by organizations that are part of Lawyers for Good Government’s coalition-based model of impact work. Each participating attorney will be assigned to one issue area (e.g., voting rights, police misconduct, education, etc.) in one state.

Lawyers for Racial Justice: Homework Gap / Education Technology Access

Seeking law firms and/or in-house legal teams to assist with a 50-state research project regarding access to technology. Often described as “the homework gap,” access to technology is often a barrier to success in schools. Because lack of access to technology is more pronounced in Black, Hispanic, and lower-income households, the homework gap is a structural inequity that expands other inequities in our society.