435.02 First Amendment Clinic
This clinic develops counseling, litigation, and advocacy skills through direct representation of clients and policy advocacy. Our clients include journalists, individuals, and organizations of diverse points of view whose free speech rights have been abridged. Representative matters include: defamation defense; prepublication review of news articles, podcasts, and blogs; access to public records and meetings; social media blocking; and specialized appellate representation and amicus support. The clinic also provides commentary and legal analysis on pending or enacted legislation that implicates First Amendment freedoms. Students are directly supervised by the Clinic Director, the Supervising Attorney, and the Local Journalism Fellow. All enrolled students will be required to bill at least 100 hours a semester on client matters or other professional activities, as well as to participating in the weekly seminar and supervision meetings.
Important:
This course may not be dropped after the first week.
Students must be able to attend the day-long clinic intensive training session to enroll in this course.
Spring 2026
| Course Number | Course Credits | Evaluation Method | Instructor |
|---|---|---|---|
| 435.02 |
4
|
Live-client representation and case management
|
Sarah H. Ludington, Amanda Martin |
| Course | |
| Degree Requirements |
JD elective
JD experiential
JD Standard 303(c)
IntlLLM-SJD-EXC elective
Course Requirements - Public Interest
PIPS elective
PIPS experiential
|
| Course Areas of Practice |
Constitutional Law and Civil Rights
|