Our Stories

Student Reflection: The Problem with Parking Tickets

Monday, August 10, 2020 |

Parking tickets have a disproportionate effect on people and communities of color. Black and Latinx communities are overpoliced and disproportionately plagued by ticketing and towing. Reporting on towing in the Bay Area reveals that Black and Latinx neighborhoods are consistently targeted for these poverty-related tows. 

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Director’s Corner: Accountability after Juneteenth

Wednesday, August 5, 2020 |

It’s been over a month since Juneteenth, and we witnessed a racial justice reckoning unlike any this country had seen before. Corporations, universities, media, philanthropy, and government officials made public commitments to implement Black Lives Matter in their hiring, grant making, teaching, business practices and internal structures. During this aftermath, EBCLC has been a racial justice accountability partner, pushing our network of gatekeepers and entities with discretionary power to value Black lives.

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The Supreme Court’s DACA Decision and EBCLC’s Commitment to Our Undocumented Community Members

Thursday, June 18, 2020 | ,

Today, we share in the community’s celebration upon hearing the U.S. Supreme Court’s momentous ruling that the Trump administration’s attempt to end the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program was unlawful. The decision, which stems from a legal challenge filed by the Regents of the University of California, the state Attorney General, and others, means that DACA will remain in effect for now…

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Community Economic Justice Star Student Reflection: Samira Seraji (Berkeley Law c/o 2020)

Tuesday, June 2, 2020 |

Now we all know Michelle Alexander. Whether you’ve read The New Jim Crow or excerpts or just been indoctrinated in her conclusions and radical aura, Michelle Alexander is a 21st century legal legend. When she came and spoke at Berkeley Law, she shocked us all. She has left the law and joined the Union Theological Seminary. There is a plague in our souls, our collective consciousness, that predated and will persist post-COVID. The human spirit has been so corrupted that we are desensitized to avoidable war, housing displacement, hunger, and carceral enslavement. This magical spiritual thread that Michelle Alexander is searching for has a glimmer that may be dimming in common society, but it’s blazing alive at 1950 University Avenue. Lucky for me, I got to be part of the magic by working with Jassmin, Seema, Hewot, Fernando, and my fellow co-interns in the Community Economic Justice (CEJ) Clinic.

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Clean Slate Star Student Reflection: Anne Ferguson (Berkeley Law c/o 2020)

Tuesday, June 2, 2020 |

In my personal statement to Berkeley Law, I wrote that my goal in coming to law school was “to find the words that will help empower people to tell their own stories.” I wanted to address the complexity and cost barriers I’d seen as a legal assistant preventing people from vindicating their rights. Though I now better understand how broad my original statement was, the Clean Slate Clinic at EBCLC has helped me work towards that goal. I am grateful to have had the opportunity to have to participate in this critical work.

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Education, Defense & Justice for Youth (EDJY): Education Advocacy Clinic Student Star Student Reflection: Safa Ansari-Bayegan (Berkeley Law c/o 2020)

Tuesday, June 2, 2020 |

I spent the fall semester of my second year at Berkeley Law as a student in the East Bay Community Law Center’s Education Advocacy Clinic. Students in the Education Advocacy Clinic work with and advocate for youth of color with disabilities who are navigating the education and juvenile legal systems in Alameda County. Over the course of the semester, I benefited from the mentorship of many incredible EBCLC advocates, and most especially from my supervisor, Rosa Bay.

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Housing Star Student Reflection: Olivia Gee (Berkeley Law c/o 2020)

Tuesday, June 2, 2020 |

My mantra, like that of many Oakland natives, has always been, “Fight the power.” I came to law school with the intention of striving for justice on multiple institutional fronts, hoping I could leverage the law to reorganize society’s power imbalances. But throughout most of law school, I grew increasingly disenchanted by lawyers’ limits — both in their conception of justice and in their abilities to achieve meaningful results for impacted people. I resented being in an institution so invested in preserving certain structures (and, by extension, barriers), emphasizing the law’s heightened importance, and praising incremental change above all else. Luckily, the opportunity to intern in EBCLC’s Housing Clinic reminded me of our capacities as legal advocates and taught me the type of lawyer that I want to be.

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