http://www.abanet.org/buslaw/students/clerkship.shtml
In recent years, many areas of the legal profession have made pursuing diversity a priority objective. Business law presents many distinct diversity challenges, as law students are often unfamiliar with the field and perceive it as conservative and unaccepting. This realization is troubling, particularly for the American Bar Association Section of Business Law because its mission is:
To encourage diversity in the Section by fostering a welcoming environment for all lawyers and promoting full and equal participation by all lawyers, including lawyers of color, women lawyers, gay and lesbian lawyers, and lawyers with disabilities ("Diverse Lawyers").
To help address this problem, the Section of Business Law has created the Diversity Clerkship Program. This is a summer program providing business law clerkship placements for qualified diverse candidates who are first or second year law students, and will provide support and mentoring to the student participants in order to give them the exposure to business practices that many of them lack. In considering a student's diversity, the Section will give special consideration to individuals who have overcome social or economic disadvantages such as physical disability, financial constraints, or cultural impediments to becoming a law student.
The clerkship program will place up to nine students in business court clerkships in the Philadelphia Commerce Court and the Delaware Court of Chancery. Possible other placements include New York, NY and Orlando, Florida.
The Section of Business Law Diversity Program will focus on judicial clerkships, where diversity among judicial clerks remains disproportionately low. For recent law school graduates, serving as a judicial law clerk is a mark of distinction and honor that advances their future career opportunities in law practice and academia, in government as high-level appointees, and in securing appointments to the bench. Clerkships in business law courts provide another unique and highly important benefit to law students: the ability to see a microcosm of business practice, and allow the student to become familiar with business issues. Such a background will prove invaluable to a career in business law, whether it be litigation or transactional work. It is hoped that after a summer's experience in the business court system, we will be able to assist participants in finding other business law placements, in law firms or corporate law departments.
The Section of Business Law Diversity Program encourages students to pursue business court clerkship opportunities and to consider careers in the practice of business law. The mission of the Program is to expose law students to the practice of business law and to provide them with work experience and foundations in business law that will further their careers.
The objectives of the Program include:
We will provide a series of substantive programs and networking opportunities designed to enhance the interns' experiences in both the Philadelphia, Delaware, New York and Florida regions through cooperation with Section members and the Business Law Section of the Philadelphia Bar Association.
Programming includes:
Membership in the ABA and the Section of Business Law is required of students applying for the program. Membership and can be obtained at the time application. Section of Business Law membership is free to ABA law student members. Applications for the internships will be solicited from all ABA accredited law schools, and a committee within the Section will screen and interview the applicants, and make the selection for summer placements. Judges will be asked to participate in the program and to accept those candidates selected by the internship selection committee. The Section will select up to nine interns and will provide a summer stipend of $6,000 to each intern. Additionally, during the course of the internship, there will be both substantive programming and networking opportunities designed to enhance the learning experience for the interns and to strengthen their interest in business law.
The application deadline is Friday, January 30, 2009. This means that all materials, including letters of recommendation, must be received by then. The application consists of 6 primary parts:
* When emailing application, a scanned copy of transcripts is acceptable if a hard copy is mailed in as well.
All application materials must be received on or before Friday, January 30, 2009 to:
Via Mail:
Heather Scheidt
ABA Section of Business Law
321 North Clark Street
Chicago, IL 60654-7598
OR
Via Email:
scheidth@staff.abanet.org