- Posted January 19, 2012
- Tweet This | Share on Facebook
U-M law student awarded Skadden Fellowship
Michigan Law 3L Paige Fern has been awarded a coveted Skadden Fellowship for a self-designed legal project that aims to ensure foster youth in California are able to take full advantage of the state's education and foster care reforms.
The Skadden Foundation announced the 28 fellowships, awarded nationwide, this month. The Fellowships were founded in 1988 by the law firm Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom, and are intended to fund new graduates in full-time work for legal and other advocacy organizations, and to encourage graduates to build public service careers based on helping poor, disabled, elderly, and homeless people, and other underserved groups.
Because the goal is to give new graduates the ability to pursue the public interest work of their choice, prospective fellows create their own programs as part of the application process. The two-year fellowships provide each Fellow with a salary and fringe benefits equivalent to what they would earn with their sponsoring organizations--in Fern's case, The Alliance for Children's Rights in Los Angeles. The award will enable her to provide technical assistance and training for local agencies that look out for California's foster youth. She'll also be able to explore other ways to improve the prospects of children who find themselves in the foster care system.
"I'm thrilled to have the opportunity to work with such a great organization on an issue I care passionately about," Fern said. "Annually, over 4,000 youth age out of California's foster care system, and they're largely unprepared for adulthood. Over 60% never receive high school diplomas. Only 1% obtain college degrees. The fellowship gives me the opportunity to help ensure that seeing former foster youth in college becomes the norm, not the exception."
She also credited Michigan Law's Child Advocacy Law Clinic--as well as Michigan Law Professors Vivek Sankaran and Josh Kay, both former Skadden Fellows themselves--with providing practical skills and inspirational leadership. That makes sense, given that the Skadden Foundation reports that almost 90 percent of former fellows have remained, like Sankaran and Kay, in public interest or public sector work.
Published: Thu, Jan 19, 2012
headlines Ingham County
- Wayne Law Professor Noah Hall co-authors a new book on water law policies
- Entrepreneur looks to a career in transactional law
- International Court of Justice judge speaks on importance of international law
- Attorney continues to defy the odds after six decades in law
- Bias Awareness & Inclusion Reception
headlines National
- Professional success is not achieved through participation trophies
- ACLU and BigLaw firm use ‘Orange is the New Black’ in hashtag effort to promote NY jail reform
- ‘Jailbreak: Love on the Run’ misses chance to examine staff sexual misconduct at detention centers
- Utah considers allowing law grads to choose apprenticeship rather than bar exam
- Can lawyers hold doctors accountable for wasting our time?
- Lawyer suspended after arguing cocaine enhanced his cognition