P*LAW Week 2020 Celebrates Careers in Public Service
Feb 8, 2020 By: yunews
Cardozo鈥檚 2020 P*LAW Week included a range of panels and discussions to introduce students to career options in public service.
Students saw an immigration proceeding in action at Monday鈥檚 鈥淭he Courtroom鈥 performance as theater company Waterwell acted out a real Department of Homeland Security case from 2012. The case concerned an immigrant from the Philippines voting in a U.S. election, not realizing that she had to be a citizen to vote. Actors took the audience through the struggles a family can face under the threat of deportation.
鈥淲hat happens in immigration court tends to be bureaucratic,鈥 said Luis Mancheno, a former Teaching Fellow in Cardozo鈥檚 and currently the supervising attorney at The Legal Aid Society. 鈥淵ou start dehumanizing a process just because it鈥檚 so much... Storytelling is powerful because it brings you back to the family you saw today.鈥 Mancheno himself was granted asylum after facing discrimination in Ecuador.
The focus on the humans behind the cases continued in Civil Rights Clinic Director 鈥檚 panel 鈥淥rganizing Behind Bars: Fighting Prison Conditions from Inside Out.鈥 Ginsberg moderated a discussion with an investigative reporter and advocates.
鈥淔ormerly incarcerated people are critical to any discussion about prison reform,鈥 Ginsberg said.
A panelist named Synthia shared her experience after 27 years in solitary confinement. 鈥淥nce you鈥檙e in there, you鈥檙e in there. You鈥檙e a number.鈥 She hopes to use her voice to fight for the rights of those who are incarcerated.
Local politicians joined in on the excitement of P*Law with a policy discussion on the 2020 Census. The panel was moderated by 2020 Census Director Julie Menin. Panelists included Councilmember Carlina Rivera, Assemblymember Deborah Glick, New York State Senator Brad Hoylman and New York City Public Advocate Jumaane Williams. Taylor Abbruzzese from the office of Rep. Carolyn Maloney and Cesar Vargas from the office of Councilmember Carlos Menchaca also joined the panel.
The panelists stressed the importance of the census.
鈥淚t鈥檚 the roads, it鈥檚 the bridges, it鈥檚 the things we use every day,鈥 said Rivera, who represents Cardozo鈥檚 Greenwich Village.
Many panelists also noted the recent challenges of the census, including the proposed citizenship question.
鈥淭hey really tried to scare us with the citizenship question,鈥 said Williams, who stressed that African Americans and undocumented immigrants are at a greater risk of being uncounted. 鈥淲hatever you came here for... you might not get that service if you don鈥檛 fill this out.鈥
Glick agreed: 鈥淭his is the biggest exam that we鈥檙e all going to take.鈥 She encouraged everyone to mobilize through social media and to get together for 鈥減izza and beer and census.鈥
Please visit if you鈥檙e interested in volunteering for the 2020 Census.
The last panel of this year鈥檚 P*Law program was 鈥淟ights, Camera, Justice: Art illuminating stories and truths of societal injustice that have been silenced by the legal system (featuring the story of The Central Park Jogger case).鈥
鈥淟ights, Camera, Justice: Art illuminating stories and truths of societal injustice that have been silenced by the legal system (featuring the story of the Central Park jogger case).鈥
The panel discussion started with an interview with Kevin Richardson, one of The Exonerated Five portrayed in Netflix鈥檚 miniseries .
鈥淲e shook the world with our story,鈥 Richardson told Cardozo 1L Victoria Lowe, who interviewed him in a pre-recorded video session. 鈥淚t鈥檚 surreal, but it鈥檚 so powerful what people can do with a vision.鈥
The panel also included Dominic Dupont, who was featured in the HBO/Vice documentary Raised in the System.
鈥淭here was a school-to-prison pipeline,鈥 Dupont said. 鈥淲hy was it happening and how could we change that narrative?鈥
Kay Murray, deputy general counsel at , discussed the legal challenges of creating a film with a social justice angle. She said common issues entertainment lawyers face include defamation, privacy and confidentiality. For documentaries, she added that licensing archival footage is particularly important.
Sharonne Salaam, mother of Yusef Salaam who was also portrayed in When They See Us, ended the panel by urging the audience to call their representatives regarding New York state bill S2074A, which concerns compensation for wrongful convictions.