The Civil Rights and Transparency Clinic is a litigation clinic focused on civil rights and civil liberties. As a part of our civil rights mission, we represent tenants facing eviction and engage in impact litigation in practice areas like housing and employment discrimination.
Our Cases: These cases are representative of the clinic’s docket.
Our Clients: We represent a range of clients that include individual victims of civil rights violations; investigative journalists and news organizations; and grassroots, regional and national advocacy organizations. Past clients include the New York Civil Liberties Union, Investigative Post, Housing Opportunities Made Equal, and Partnership for the Public Good. Recognizing that people of color, women, and people with disabilities are disproportionately evicted, we have joined the Eviction Prevention Program of Western New York to defend tenants facing eviction. Our partners include Neighborhood Legal Services, the Volunteer Lawyers Project, the Center for Elder Law and Justice, the Legal Aid Bureau of Buffalo, and the Western New York Law Center.
Student Engagement: This clinic is designed for student attorneys to grow into the attorneys they want to be. Our clinic offers invaluable hands-on experience practicing law, under the supportive supervision of clinical professors. Student attorneys can expect to learn critical lawyering skills to become practice ready (which are increasingly on the bar exam). They work on cutting-edge legal issues and make a positive difference. They walk away with more confidence, a better sense of their lawyering identity, and practical skills that an employer will value. Our student attorneys lead on all aspects of our client representations. Students litigate in local state and federal courts and before government agencies. An effective lawyer has a toolbox that includes more than litigation. They also engage in non-litigation advocacy like drafting white papers and policy proposals, presenting them to key decisionmakers.
Heather Abraham
Director of Civil Rights & Transparency Clinic
Clinical Legal Education
Recorded Presentation for Parents of Trans and Nonbinary Children
Know Your Rights: Protecting Trans, Non Binary & Gender Non Conforming Students - A video presentation for parents of trans & gender non-confirming children in schools.
NYCLU: Know-Your-Rights Guides for LGBTQIA+ Students
Pride Center of Western New York Transgender Youth Program
The Pride Center of Western New York Health Services provides LGBTQ+ support services, free and confidential HIV testing, STI screening and related services.
GLYS of WNY facilitates support groups for trans youth and parents and caregivers of trans youth.
BestSelf Safe Space
A trans-inclusionary drop-in protected place for homeless or temporarily displaced youth. Guests can get a hot meal, take a shower, wash their clothes, watch television and play video games.
Evergreen Health
Evergreen is a health care service center that provides gender-affirming care, as well as other specialty care (including sexual health care) and primary care in a trans-friendly environment.
Trans Lifeline’s Hotline
The Hotline is an anonymous and confidential peer support phone service run by trans people for trans and questioning peers. You can call if you need someone trans to talk to, even if you’re not in crisis or if you’re not sure you’re trans. It does not do nonconsensual active rescue (i.e., does not call 911, emergency services, or law enforcement).
The Trevor Project Crisis and Suicide Prevention Hotline for LGBTQ+ youth
In very specific instances of abuse or a clear concern of an in-progress or imminent suicide, Trevor counselors may need to contact a child welfare agency or emergency service. You can access it by online chat, call, or text.
Q Chat Space
A chat-based online community space for LGBTQ+ teens.