Georgetown University
Clinical Teaching Fellow - Center for Applied Legal Studies
Georgetown University, Washington, District of Columbia, us, 20022
Clinical Teaching Fellow - Center for Applied Legal Studies
Georgetown University: Law Center
Location:
Georgetown Law Clinics Open Date:
Oct 15, 2025 Deadline:
Jan 31, 2026 at 11:59 PM Eastern Time
Description 2026-2028 Clinical Teaching Fellowship
The
Center for Applied Legal Studies
(CALS) at Georgetown Law announces that it is now accepting applications for its annual fellowship program in clinical legal education. CALS will offer one lawyer a two-year teaching fellowship (July 2026-June 2028), providing a unique opportunity to learn how to teach law in a clinical setting. Since 1995, CALS has specialized in immigration law, specifically in asylum practice. Guided by faculty and fellows, law students represent clients in immigration court and in asylum adjudications by the Department of Homeland Security.
At CALS, our two fellows and faculty members work as colleagues, sharing responsibilities for designing and teaching classes, supervising law students in their representation of clients, selecting and grading students, administering the clinic, and all other matters. Clinical fellows also monitor and manage any cases that the students are not working on during the current semester. In addition, the fellow will undertake independent legal scholarship, conducting the research and writing to produce a law review article of publishable quality. All Georgetown clinical teaching fellows are enrolled in an LLM program and attend a weekly course focused on clinical teaching and pedagogy during their first year. They also have the opportunity to attend a weekly seminar focused on academic scholarship and writing. Both CALS and Georgetown faculty support fellows entering the legal teaching job market at the end of their first year.
This fellowship is particularly suitable for lawyers with some degree of practice experience who now want to embark upon careers in law teaching. Most of our previous fellows are now teaching law or have done so for substantial portions of their careers.
The fellow currently receive full tuition and fees in the LL.M. program at Georgetown University, and a stipend of $70,000 in the first year and $75,000 in the second year. Information on clinical fellow benefits is available here. CALS fellows have a flexible schedule, although fellows should expect to be on campus three to five days per week during the academic semesters. On successful completion of the requirements, the Fellow will be granted the degree of Master of Laws (Advocacy) with distinction.
Former holders of this fellowship include Mary Brittingham (1995-97), Andrea Goodman (1996-98),
Michele Pistone
(1997-99), Rebecca Story (1998-2000),
Virgil Wiebe
(1999-2001), Anna Marie Gallagher (2000-02), Regina Germain (2001-2003),
Dina Francesca Haynes
(2002-2004),
Diane Uchimiya
(2003-2005),
Jaya Ramji-Nogales
(2004-2006),
Denise Gilman
(2005-2007),
Susan Benesch
(2006-2008),
Kate Aschenbrenner
(2007-2009),
Anjum Gupta
(2008-2010), Alice Clapman (2009-2011)
Geoffrey Heeren
(2010-2012),
Heidi Altman
(2011-2013),
Laila Hlass
(2012-2014),
Lindsay Harris
(2013-2015), Jean C. Han (2014-2016),
Rebecca Feldmann
(2015-2017),
Pooja Dadhania
(2016-2018),
Karen Baker
(2017-2019),
Faiza Sayed
(2018-2020),
Deena Sharuk
(2019 -2021),
Alison Coutifaris
(2020-2022),
Jocelyn B. Cazares-Willingham
(2021-2023),
Iman Saad
(2022-2024), and
Lauren Hughes
(2023-2025).
The current fellows are
Megan Elman-Welch
and
Sophia Genovese . The faculty members directing CALS are
Andrew Schoenholtz
and
Denise Gilman .
Qualifications Applicants must have two years of experience with removal cases in immigration court. The fellow must be a member of a state bar at the start of the fellowship; therefore, this fellowship is not suitable for graduating law students.
CALS welcomes and considers applications from any and all interested applicants without regard to race, color, religion, age, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, disability, veteran, or other protected status. If you have any questions, call CALS at
or email them to
.
Application Instructions To apply, please submit a resume, law school transcript, a writing sample, and a detailed statement of interest (approximately 5 pages) via this portal.
The materials be submitted by January 31, 2026.
The statement statement of interest should address: a) why you are interested in this fellowship; b) what you can contribute to the Clinic; c) your experience with asylum and other immigration cases; d) your professional or career goals for the next five or ten years; e) your reactions to the Clinic's
goals
and
teaching methods
as described on its
website ; and f) anything else that you consider pertinent. Address your application to Directors, Center for Applied Legal Studies, Georgetown Law, 600 New Jersey Avenue, NW, Suite 332, Washington, D.C. 20001. Appliations must be submitted via Interfolio (LINK).
CALS welcomes and considers applications from any and all interested applicants without regard to race, color, religion, age, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, disability, veteran, or other protected status. If you have any questions, call CALS at
or email them to
.
For more information and to apply, visit 174406
GU is an Equal Opportunity Employer. All qualified applicants are encouraged to apply, and will receive consideration for employment without regard to age, citizenship, color, disability, family responsibilities, gender identity and expression, genetic information, marital status, matriculation, national origin, race, religion, personal appearance, political affiliation, sex, sexual orientation, veteran status, or any other characteristic protected by law. jeid-16806ec835c9524eb16ddf6eb3ea9b5d
Location:
Georgetown Law Clinics Open Date:
Oct 15, 2025 Deadline:
Jan 31, 2026 at 11:59 PM Eastern Time
Description 2026-2028 Clinical Teaching Fellowship
The
Center for Applied Legal Studies
(CALS) at Georgetown Law announces that it is now accepting applications for its annual fellowship program in clinical legal education. CALS will offer one lawyer a two-year teaching fellowship (July 2026-June 2028), providing a unique opportunity to learn how to teach law in a clinical setting. Since 1995, CALS has specialized in immigration law, specifically in asylum practice. Guided by faculty and fellows, law students represent clients in immigration court and in asylum adjudications by the Department of Homeland Security.
At CALS, our two fellows and faculty members work as colleagues, sharing responsibilities for designing and teaching classes, supervising law students in their representation of clients, selecting and grading students, administering the clinic, and all other matters. Clinical fellows also monitor and manage any cases that the students are not working on during the current semester. In addition, the fellow will undertake independent legal scholarship, conducting the research and writing to produce a law review article of publishable quality. All Georgetown clinical teaching fellows are enrolled in an LLM program and attend a weekly course focused on clinical teaching and pedagogy during their first year. They also have the opportunity to attend a weekly seminar focused on academic scholarship and writing. Both CALS and Georgetown faculty support fellows entering the legal teaching job market at the end of their first year.
This fellowship is particularly suitable for lawyers with some degree of practice experience who now want to embark upon careers in law teaching. Most of our previous fellows are now teaching law or have done so for substantial portions of their careers.
The fellow currently receive full tuition and fees in the LL.M. program at Georgetown University, and a stipend of $70,000 in the first year and $75,000 in the second year. Information on clinical fellow benefits is available here. CALS fellows have a flexible schedule, although fellows should expect to be on campus three to five days per week during the academic semesters. On successful completion of the requirements, the Fellow will be granted the degree of Master of Laws (Advocacy) with distinction.
Former holders of this fellowship include Mary Brittingham (1995-97), Andrea Goodman (1996-98),
Michele Pistone
(1997-99), Rebecca Story (1998-2000),
Virgil Wiebe
(1999-2001), Anna Marie Gallagher (2000-02), Regina Germain (2001-2003),
Dina Francesca Haynes
(2002-2004),
Diane Uchimiya
(2003-2005),
Jaya Ramji-Nogales
(2004-2006),
Denise Gilman
(2005-2007),
Susan Benesch
(2006-2008),
Kate Aschenbrenner
(2007-2009),
Anjum Gupta
(2008-2010), Alice Clapman (2009-2011)
Geoffrey Heeren
(2010-2012),
Heidi Altman
(2011-2013),
Laila Hlass
(2012-2014),
Lindsay Harris
(2013-2015), Jean C. Han (2014-2016),
Rebecca Feldmann
(2015-2017),
Pooja Dadhania
(2016-2018),
Karen Baker
(2017-2019),
Faiza Sayed
(2018-2020),
Deena Sharuk
(2019 -2021),
Alison Coutifaris
(2020-2022),
Jocelyn B. Cazares-Willingham
(2021-2023),
Iman Saad
(2022-2024), and
Lauren Hughes
(2023-2025).
The current fellows are
Megan Elman-Welch
and
Sophia Genovese . The faculty members directing CALS are
Andrew Schoenholtz
and
Denise Gilman .
Qualifications Applicants must have two years of experience with removal cases in immigration court. The fellow must be a member of a state bar at the start of the fellowship; therefore, this fellowship is not suitable for graduating law students.
CALS welcomes and considers applications from any and all interested applicants without regard to race, color, religion, age, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, disability, veteran, or other protected status. If you have any questions, call CALS at
or email them to
.
Application Instructions To apply, please submit a resume, law school transcript, a writing sample, and a detailed statement of interest (approximately 5 pages) via this portal.
The materials be submitted by January 31, 2026.
The statement statement of interest should address: a) why you are interested in this fellowship; b) what you can contribute to the Clinic; c) your experience with asylum and other immigration cases; d) your professional or career goals for the next five or ten years; e) your reactions to the Clinic's
goals
and
teaching methods
as described on its
website ; and f) anything else that you consider pertinent. Address your application to Directors, Center for Applied Legal Studies, Georgetown Law, 600 New Jersey Avenue, NW, Suite 332, Washington, D.C. 20001. Appliations must be submitted via Interfolio (LINK).
CALS welcomes and considers applications from any and all interested applicants without regard to race, color, religion, age, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, disability, veteran, or other protected status. If you have any questions, call CALS at
or email them to
.
For more information and to apply, visit 174406
GU is an Equal Opportunity Employer. All qualified applicants are encouraged to apply, and will receive consideration for employment without regard to age, citizenship, color, disability, family responsibilities, gender identity and expression, genetic information, marital status, matriculation, national origin, race, religion, personal appearance, political affiliation, sex, sexual orientation, veteran status, or any other characteristic protected by law. jeid-16806ec835c9524eb16ddf6eb3ea9b5d