
The Peggy Browning Fund provides unique opportunities for law students to work for economic and social justice. The Fund accomplishes this goal through a variety of activities, including the sponsorship of legal fellowships and workers' rights conferences for law students. In so doing, it is our belief that law students who are exposed to these positive experiences will have an increased understanding and appreciation for the issues facing workers and what representing working people is all about.
Our Fellowship Program provides students with an opportunity to work for non-profit
labor-related organizations. Our office works closely with participating law schools
in soliciting qualified and committed students for our programs. Additionally, we provide
networking and other support services to the selected Fellows. Each year we bring the
Fellows and their supervisors from the mentor organizations together for a half-day
workshop. The mentor organizations present worker rights/labor issues facing their clients;
students outline the work projects accomplished during their respective fellowships.
Through our annual National Law Students Workers' Rights Conference, we provide educational
opportunities for law students to learn more about the issues facing labor today.
Each fall, through formal and informal sessions and interactive workshops,
top academicians and practitioners address the issue of labor's relevance
in the coming years. The goals of our conference are two-fold: to offer
encouragement to law students already committed to workers' rights, and to
inform students not currently committed to these interests, in the hope
that as they become leaders in their communities they will bring an appreciation
of workers' rights issues to their work as lawyers and community leaders.
Students benefit from the numerous other networking opportunities we provide as well.
Employers frequently contact us with job openings, and we include job postings on our
website. Many applicants for our fellowships are hired by our mentor organizations
in other positions, so our recruitment efforts help place far more than the
students we directly support.
The prestige of a Peggy Browning Fellowship has become widely recognized.
Many organizations and law firms have reported that, because of our reputation
and their experience with our Fellows, they consider a Peggy Browning Fellowship
as an especially important credential.
Over 100 law schools participate in our programs.
This year we will support in excess of 40 fellowships throughout the nation. Hundreds of students have attended our annual conferences, and many have found summer positions or even longer-term employment through the networking
opportunities we have provided.
Any accredited law school wishing to participate must identify a Career
Service Officer and a Labor Law Professor to serve as liaisons with The Peggy Browning Fund.
They must actively promote the program, identify interested students,
and share information with them. It is also most helpful, although not required,
if schools assist The Peggy Browning Fund in various ways (e.g., by covering some
or all costs for their students to attend our annual conference, by taking ads in the
Program Books for one of our events, by providing facilities or helping organize
a fund-raiser, etc.).
Send a letter expressing your interest in participating, and supporting such a commitment, to:
Mary Anne Moffa
Executive Director
The Peggy Browning Fund
1818 Market Street, Suite 2300
Philadelphia, PA 19103
Email: mmoffa@peggybrowningfund.org
Please include all contact information (including email address) for
the liaisons identified for your school. Also include such
information for your Law School Dean.