School of Law Receives $1.15M for Immigration Law Clinic

Holly Cooper speaks in front of Bel Aire in Woodland in March 2017
Holly Cooper speaks in front of Bel Aire in Woodland in March 2017

UC Davis Will Use Money to Help Migrant Children in Detention

By Carla Meyer

Two nonprofit organizations have given University of California, Davis, School of Law a total of $1.15 million to help fund additional staff attorneys and further serve immigrants through its Immigration Law Clinic.

Together Rising, a nonprofit organization that raises money for specific causes, donated $900,000 it generated through a highly successful crowdfunding effort following national reports of inhumane conditions at Border Patrol facilities where migrant children are detained.

The James Irvine Foundation, additionally, granted $250,000 to the clinic as part of a larger campaign to assist immigrant families and communities.

“UC Davis School of Law greatly appreciates the support and confidence of Together Rising and the James Irvine Foundation,” said Kevin R. Johnson, dean of UC Davis School of Law. “Our amazing Immigration Law Clinic will have much-needed resources to provide legal assistance to immigrants in dire circumstances.”

The Together Rising gift will fund two Immigration Law Clinic legal fellows for three years. The Irvine Foundation grant will support the overarching work of the clinic, including efforts by lecturer Holly S. Cooper and clinic fellows and students to ensure compliance with the Flores settlement, the 1997 agreement that established basic standards for the treatment of juvenile migrant detainees. Cooper is an attorney on the Flores case.

She, along with lecturer Amagda Pérez, directs the Immigration Law Clinic. UC Davis Law students, under the supervision of attorneys and fellows, provide legal assistance to immigrants in need.

The gifts will “allow the clinic and the law school to significantly increase monitoring, oversight and support of migrant children in detention,” said Karen Charney, executive director of development and alumni relations for UC Davis School of Law.

Reports emerged in June of inadequate food, water and sanitation at a Clint, Texas, detention facility. Cooper, part of a team assessing conditions there, told the Associated Press that “in my 22 years of doing visits with children in detention, I have never heard of this level of inhumanity.”

Together Rising’s subsequent crowdfunding effort sought $240,000 to fund an Immigration Law Clinic fellow for two years. The response far exceeded that, with donations reaching nearly $1.2 million within 24 hours, and more than $2.6 million after seven days. The remaining funds raised will go to other entities working on behalf of detained children.

With its gift to the clinic, the group aims to help the Immigration Law Clinic “expand the reach and impact of the life-saving work they have already been doing. … (and) help make meaningful change for these detained children,” Together Rising program manager Gloria Goeres said.


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1 comment

  1. Migrant Children in  Concentration Camp

    Reports emerged in June of inadequate food, water and sanitation at a Clint, Texas, detention facility. Cooper, part of a team assessing conditions there, told the Associated Press that “in my 22 years of doing visits with children in detention, I have never heard of this level of inhumanity.”

    Ecclesiastes 4:1-3 New International Version (NIV)
    Oppression, Toil, Friendlessness

     Again I looked and saw all the oppression that was taking place under the sun:

    I saw the tears of the oppressed—    and they have no comforter;power was on the side of their oppressors—    and they have no comforter.And I declared that the dead,    who had already died,are happier than the living,    who are still alive.3But better than both    is the one who has never been born,who has not seen the evil    that is done under the sun.

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