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The Jacob Burns Community Legal Clinics

The Jacob Burns Community Legal Clinics were founded in 1971, and were dedicated in 1991 to acknowledge the generous support of Jacob Burns (LLB '24, Hon. LLC '70). A longtime trustee of the University, Burns (1902-1993) was renowned as a lawyer, artist, and philanthropist. GW Law is proud to honor this significant contribution to the "uplifting and maintenance of the legal profession," and his fearless advocacy of the principle of "equal justice under the law."

Dean Matthew with members of the The Jacob Burns Community Legal Clinics

The Clinics, an educational curriculum as well as a public interest legal practice with GW Law, provide a deep experiential learning environment for students as they represent clients and hone their skills. Clinic students, who are certified to practice as lawyers in a range of jurisdictions and at both the local and federal level, work directly with individual and organizational clients in matters involving intellectual property protection, transactional law, family law, appellate litigation, housing and health law, and more than a dozen practice areas in between. Students enjoy close supervision by law school faculty, gain real world lawyering experience, and engage in professional development that increases their job marketability.

The Jacob Burns Community Legal Clinics operate under the direction of Clinic Director and Associate Dean for Experiential Programs and Equity Carmia Caesar, Clinic Faculty Director Jessica Steinberg, Managing Attorney & Associate Program Director for the Clinics Andrea R. Johnson, and Administrative Manager Milagros Tudela.

 

Contact Us: 2000 G Street NW, Washington, DC 20052 | 202.994.7463 | Hours: Monday-Friday; 9 am-5 pm

21

Number of GW Law Clinics

50k

Client Service Hours Annually

264

Enrolled Students Annually

25+

Practice Areas

Recent News

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Educating for the Future

August 14, 2025

EVEN BEFORE IT CONFERRED ITS FIRST law degrees, the George Washington University was a trailblazer in adapting and applying legal principles to issues shaping the future.

Carmia Caesar and Jessica Steinberg

GW Law Announces Changes to Clinical Program Leadership

June 27, 2025

Beginning on July 1, 2025, Professor Jessica Steinberg and Dean Carmia Caesar will assume leadership of the Clinics.

GW Law students stand on the steps at the U.S. Capitol.

Briefing Congress on Eviction Policy: The Health Justice Policy and Advocacy Clinic Takes to Capitol Hill to Discuss Housing Policy

June 5, 2025

The Congressional Hispanic Caucus invited the Health Justice Policy & Advocacy Clinic to participate in a virtual briefing for its members.

Community Impact & Newsroom

 

 

 

 

Faculty in the News

"Does It Really "…End With Us?""

Forbes cited research led by Joan Meier on the reality that mother’s claims of abuse in parental court increase their chances of losing child custody.

"California’s Rent Control Ballot Measure Could Reverberate Across the U.S."

Governing quoted Emily Benfer on the impact of the rising cost of living for millions of Americans.

"Who could get custody of missing Manassas Park mother's baby? Legal expert weighs in"

WJLA-ABC7 quoted Joan Meier on the straightforward argument for custody battles, but included the likelihood of drawn out and “wrenches thrown in the plan.”

Evictions for making too many 911 calls happen. The Justice Department wants it to stop

Emily Benfer told USA Today that crime-free rental ordinances harm communities of color, domestic violence survivors, and low-income populations.

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