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Description
2025 Ella Baker Summer Internship
From taking on the NYPD’s racially discriminatory stop-and-frisk program to challenging indefinite detention and torture at Guantánamo and the cruel and unusual treatment of incarcerated transgender women by detention facilities in the South, the Center for Constitutional Rights has been on the front lines of the fight for social justice since 1966. We’re a multiracial, diverse staff committed to building the power of the people and communities we represent. Whether it’s immigration detention, solitary confinement, the Movement for Black Lives, Muslim profiling, Palestinian human rights, or environmental or gender injustices in the South, we fight for civil and human rights through creative use of litigation and other forms of legal as well as non-legal advocacy. Building upon its historic roots in the Deep South, the Center for Constitutional Rights has expanded this movement advocacy model to the South, through its Southern Justice Rising initiative, to help strengthen, support, and build the power of southern regional movements to fight oppressive power and to actualize their visions for a more equitable future.
THE ELLA BAKER PROGRAM
The Center for Constitutional Rights created the Ella Baker Summer Internship Program in 1987 to honor the legacy of Ella Baker, a hero of the civil rights movement, and to train the next generation of social justice lawyers. Through our program, interns gain practical litigation experience and sharpen their theoretical understanding of the relationship between social change, organizing, and lawyering. Ella Baker interns also become connected to a global community of social justice law students and lawyers through our Ella Baker Alumni Network.
PROGRAM DATES
The internship will begin on Tuesday, June 3, 2025, and end on Friday, August 8, 2025. Ella Baker interns are expected to work 40 hours per week.
APPLICATION INSTRUCTIONS, DEADLINES & TIMELINE
The application process opens for 2Ls on August 30, 2024 and closes on October 5, 2024 at midnight PST. During this period candidates will be able to complete an online application on CCR’s website (ccrjustice.org) or at https://ellabakerccr.wufoo.com/forms/ella-baker-2025-summer-internship-application/ . Please note, we will not accept applications before August 30 or after October 5. Once the website link is live, students will be prompted to upload the following documents as a single PDF, named “[Last name], [First name] Application”:
- Cover Letter
- Resume
- Three references with contact information
If granted an interview, applicants may also be asked to submit a short legal writing sample.
Please note, for the last four internship classes we did not interview or hire any 1Ls. If we do hire 1Ls for 2025, we will update our website to indicate so in December. Interviews for 2L applicants will be held in mid-October 2024, and 2L students will be informed by early November if they are selected. The Center for Constitutional Rights only offers internships for a single term or semester (fall, spring, or summer). Students who have formerly interned with us are not eligible to apply for another term.
WHY IS THE INTERNSHIP NAMED AFTER ELLA BAKER?
Ella Baker devoted her life to social change. During the Depression she organized consumer cooperatives and wrote, taught, and lectured on consumer affairs for the Federal Works Progress Administration. In the 1940’s she traveled throughout the South, often alone in dangerous segregated areas, organizing chapters of the NAACP. She was an early executive director of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, led by the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
Ella Baker strongly believed that community members and young people could make significant changes in their lives. She said, “My theory is, strong people don’t need strong leaders.” She seldom appeared on television or in news stories, explaining that, “The kind of role that I tried to play was to pick up pieces or put together pieces out of which I hoped organization might come.” Many consider her greatest influence to be with the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC). As an advisor to SNCC members who were generations younger, she rarely intervened, although her advice was often sought. She said, “Most of the youngsters had been trained to believe in or to follow adults if they could. I felt they ought to have a chance to learn to think things through and to make decisions.”
The Center for Constitutional Rights is proud to honor her life and memory with the Ella Baker Summer Internship Program. It is our hope that many young people will be inspired to follow in her footsteps.
Responsibilities
The internship was administered in a hybrid setting for the summer of 2024. Next year, we will continue to have a hybrid program with the option of being fully remote. Interns will work under the direct supervision of Center for Constitutional Rights attorneys and advocacy program managers on our cases and projects. Interns also participate in training on litigation skills, movement lawyering, and other relevant topics. Interns’ responsibilities may include: legal research and writing for domestic and international litigation, factual investigation, client and witness interviews, policy/legislative research, and participation in client and community meetings. Interns are also provided opportunities to attend court proceedings and organization events.
In the past, interns have worked on cases involving solitary confinement, discriminatory policing practices, social and economic rights, free speech, immigrants’ rights, U.S. detention and targeted killing practices, environmental justice, universal jurisdiction over international human rights abuses, gender and LGBTIA+ justice domestically and internationally, and related work in the South in connection with the Southern Justice Rising initiative. Interns also have had the opportunity to work on various advocacy campaigns.
Qualifications
- Students must have completed their second year of law school by summer of 2025. The Center for Constitutional Rights does not accept law graduates in the Ella Baker program.
- Experience and/or a demonstrated commitment to racial justice, gender justice, civil rights, international human rights, national security law, and/or social justice organizing.
- Excellent legal research and communication skills.
Compensation
Because we have limited resources, the Center for Constitutional Rights requires applicants to make diligent efforts to secure summer funding from their law schools. If you are not able to get funding from your school, or your school provides funding at a lower amount than CCR, CCR will provide you with summer funding or will supplement your school’s funding. If paid by the Center for Constitutional Rights, interns will be required to file a W4 to deduct state and federal taxes from your paycheck and will receive a W2 in January 2026, following your internship. Last year, CCR funded internships up to $7500/summer. Accepted students will receive more information about this process after receiving notice of their acceptance. CCR also provides $1000 in relocation funding for students who live outside the New York City area and are traveling to New York for the program.
Contact
If you have questions about the Ella Baker Program, please contact: [email protected]