A Legal Residency is an exciting opportunity designed to provide a bridge from law school to real-world work as a lawyer. It combines two key components:
- an intensive, high-credit fieldwork experience doing work that is similar to the experience of a lawyer representing a client or engaging in other lawyering tasks under appropriate supervision, and
- an academic component, usually a two-credit seminar, in which the students and professor engage in goal setting, discussion, and reflection to enhance learning from the fieldwork and also work on lawyering skills such as interviewing, problem-solving, counseling, and advocacy.
The Legal Residency Program is only available to students in the last year of law school. Combined with the law school’s nationally ranked clinical program, robust externship program, and partnership with the Minnesota Justice Foundation, the Legal Residency Program gives students unmatched opportunities to gain practical, real-world experience during each year of law school.
Legal Residency examples
Mitchell Hamline offers specialized residency courses in the areas of criminal law, family law, and solo practice. Residency placements in a variety of other areas of law and work settings are available through the General Residency course. The seminar component of the General Residency course is online and asynchronous to allow students to work at residency placements outside the Twin Cities or in other states.
- Central Minnesota Legal Services
- Colich & Associates
- Family Law Referee, Hennepin County
- Federal Public Defender’s Office
- Mid-Minnesota Legal Aid (Minneapolis and St. Cloud)
- Minneapolis City Attorney’s Office
- Croix County District Attorney’s Office
- United States Attorney’s Office
- Waggoner Law Office
Credits and hours
Students gain 10–15 credits total for the fieldwork and academic components and must work at least three full days each week at their residency site. A 10-credit residency, including a 2-credit seminar, requires approximately 26 hours of fieldwork per week over 14 weeks. A 15-credit residency, including a 2-credit seminar, requires approximately 42 hours of fieldwork per week over 14 weeks.
Placement process
All residencies require submission of an application. Most placements will be made through a process designed to match student goals and abilities with field site needs and opportunities, but students may organize their own placements. Application forms and instructions for a given semester (e.g. spring) will be available during the preceding semester (e.g. fall) and the specific due date will be set so that placements may be finalized prior to registration for the desired residency semester.
Collaborative Community Law Initiative
Incubator Residency
The Collaborative Community Law Initiative (CCLI) provides recent Mitchell Hamline graduates with the opportunity to develop community-based solo practices that serve low and moderate income clients in the supportive environment of a shared office space with on-site mentorship. Students interested in pursuing this opportunity after graduation are encouraged to apply for the residency in their last semester of law school. In addition to a full-semester immersion in legal practice, we plan to conduct a workshop seminar on creating a business plan for community law practice in conjunction with CCLI. If you have an interest in setting up a solo practice in an area that is not covered by our existing residencies in Criminal and Family Law, such as Immigration Law, Business Law, or general Civil Law, please so indicate on your application and we will work with you to develop a practice immersion plan that will help meet your goals.
For additional information, please visit the Collaborative Community Initiative website.
“Legal incubator for Mitchell Hamline graduates begins work” November 1, 2016
To Apply
The deadline for Spring 2017 recruitment for the Legal Residency is October 2, 2017.
Legal Residency ApplicationQuestions?
Please contact Sue.McBrayer @mitchellhamline.edu
651-695-7672