Experiential Learning

Students serving this summer

Charleston School of Law students Caroline Thomas, Julia Ricci, and Victoria VanHout are participating in the Equal Justice Works Rural Summer Legal Corps Fellowship program this summer.

According to Equal Justice Work, “rural communities across the country often experience significant gaps in access to justice due to low bandwidth at local legal aid organizations and increased travel time to reach the nearest legal aid providers.”

As a result, in 2016 Equal Justice Works and Legal Services Corporation launched the Rural Summer Legal Corps (RSLC) in an effort to mobilize law students for a summer of service increasing access and capacity for local legal aid providers.

A total of 49 RSLC Fellows will provide legal assistance to rural communities in such areas:

  • Economic and Employment Law
  • Housing
  • Public Benefits and Economic Matters
  • Family and Criminal Justice
  • Tribal Law
  • Disaster and Crisis Law

Charleston Law student Caroline Thomas is serving in Eastern Virginia this summer and working on Elder Law and Housing Law.

“I am looking forward to deepening my commitment to public interest law and gaining hands-on experience advocating for those who need it most,” she wrote in a recent post on LinkedIn. 

Julia Ricci and Victoria VanHout will be serving in Florida and North Carolina respectively, and will focus on Disaster and Crisis Law.

“This fellowship offers students an opportunity to connect with civil legal aid organizations to address critical legal issues facing rural communities,” said VanHout. “I will be able to develop skills by providing legal support to residents in high poverty communities.”

Charleston School of Law provides experiential learning programs to give students practical, hands-on experience. Students can learn and serve through our clinical partnerships, externships, and more than 150 pro bono sites locally, regionally and nationally.

You can learn more at charlestonlaw.edu/experiential-learning.

“Before this Fellowship, I had no experience navigating many of the concrete, day-to-day tasks in the life of a public interest lawyer. This fellowship allowed me to gain the ability to do all these things, and to do them well, while also making a difference in the lives of clients.” – 2024 Student Fellow

The 2024 Rural Summer Legal Corps Student Fellows served 2,892 clients over 15,900 hours of service and spent 7,044 hours on direct legal services and assisted on 1,393 legal cases. In addition, 2,679 individuals served through indirect legal services, such as resources and training.

Student Fellows built 171 new community partnerships with local organizations and hosted 209 legal outreach events.

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