Assoc. Professor - Legal Support teaches courses in the discipline area of legal services. Develops and designs curriculum plans to foster student learning, stimulate class discussions, and ensures student engagement. Being an Assoc. Professor - Legal Support provides tutoring and academic counseling to students, maintains classes related records, and assesses student coursework. Collaborates and supports colleagues regarding research interests and co-curricular activities. Additionally, Assoc. Professor - Legal Support typically reports to a department head. Requires a PhD or terminal degree appropriate to the field. Has considerable experience and is qualified to teach at undergraduate and graduate levels and conducts research and case studies in field of interest and may publish findings in trade journals or textbooks. (Copyright 2024 Salary.com)
This role will be based in our Richmond, Charlottesville, Falls Church, or Petersburg offices.
Salary Note: Salary range is $90,000 to $115,000 based on years of relevant experience and LAJC’s formal salary scale, upward 12% cost-of-living adjustment ($100,800 to 128,800) is available for positions based in Falls Church. To allow for salary growth within the position over time, the anticipated hiring range for this position is between $90,000 - $102,500 ($100,800 - $114,800 12% adjustment for Falls Church). Placement on the range will be based on factors such as years of relevant experience, budget, and internal equity.
About the Legal Aid Justice Center:
The Legal Aid Justice Center is a nationally recognized, non-profit organization that partners with low-income clients and communities of color in Virginia to fight for racial, social, and economic justice. We understand that the harms our clients endure are inextricably linked to overarching systems of injustice. Together we are dismantling those systems through a combination of community organizing, litigation, policy advocacy, public relations, and individual legal services.
Founded in 1967, LAJC has offices in Charlottesville, Richmond, Petersburg, and Falls Church and provides services under six key program areas: Civil Rights & Racial Justice (focuses on the criminal legal system), Housing & Consumer Justice, Youth Justice, Health Justice & Public Benefits, Immigrant Justice, and Worker Justice. As examples of LAJC’s recent work, our lawsuit and organizing against the state forced reform of Virginia’s unemployment insurance system, including advocacy that resulted in the distribution of over $1 billion in illegally withheld payments to over 160,000 Virginians. During the pandemic, we demanded and secured a statewide eviction moratorium and emergency pandemic protections that helped hundreds of families avoid eviction. We reduced incarceration across the state, including reducing the population of a local immigration detention center down to historically low levels through a coordinated effort of organizing paired with impact and individual litigation. Our staff are on the front lines of some of the most important anti-poverty fights happening today.
With a staff of over 90, the past few years have been a time of exciting growth and opportunity for the organization. In addition to the growth of programmatic efforts including increased organizing capacity, LAJC has expanded its operations and administrative capacity, created new opportunities for professional growth and leadership among staff, engaged in ongoing race equity work, and explored changes to organizational structure to deepen its efforts to create long-term, sustainable, community-driven change.
LAJC’s latest strategic plan is available at https://www.justice4all.org/lajc-strategic-plan-2022-2026/#area d.
For more information about LAJC’s work and programs, visit www.justice4all.org.
About the Health Justice & Public Benefits Program:
Formerly a part of LAJC’s Economic Justice Program (EJP), the new Health Justice and Public Benefits Program will continue its work of tackling health inequity, access to essential public benefits such as unemployment, food stamps and social security income. We partner with directly-impacted communities to achieve racial justice, social justice, and economic justice for all by dismantling systems that create and perpetuate poverty.
The Health Justice and Public Benefits Program consists of a team of navigators and attorneys who work to expand healthcare coverage, and challenge the systems that keep people from healthy, thriving lives. Recent wins include obtaining over one billion dollars in unemployment benefits for Virginians through a lawsuit against the Virginia Employment Commission during the pandemic; class-wide reforms to hearing processes for Medicaid appeals and access to home healthcare; and building out two Medical Legal Partnerships across two regions. Our Affordable Care Act navigators provide advocacy and guidance for healthcare enrollment both during open enrollment as well as throughout the year. We also have a robust practice of Social Security, SNAP, and Medicaid appeals.
About the Position:
Legal Aid Justice Center seeks a strategic, collaborative legal advocate to lead a creative and passionate team of attorneys and organizers as Legal Director, Health Justice & Public Benefits. The Legal Director serves as a member of the senior management team, and in addition to setting strategy and leading program for the Health Justice and Public Benefits team, supports ongoing strategy and development across the organization. Currently reporting to the Deputy Director for Advocacy, the Legal Director provides strategic vision for and guidance over the program’s direct services and advocacy campaigns, and supervises and mentors attorneys on legal strategy and litigation efforts. Together with the Director of Organizing, the Legal Director supports the organizers on the team.
The Legal Director will have the opportunity to lead in the following areas:
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