About the Community Empowerment Law Project

The Community Empowerment Law Project (CELP) works with clients and communities to amplify their voices, increase their impact, and build strategic alliances to advance racial and economic justice in the State of Iowa and beyond. The clinic represents individual and organizational clients in non-litigation matters that emphasize capacity building, law reform, and systemic change. These matters have included: coalition building; legislative, regulatory, and policy advocacy; campaign design and implementation; and community education.

Students work as a part of a team to support and advise a client with a complex problem. CELP is unique in that students will initiate the representation and end the representation in one semester, so that they can see the full arc of the project, not just small pieces or tasks. Students in CELP will design a project plan, conduct all legal and factual research, interview relevant stakeholders, counsel clients, make strategic choices, and design, author, and present final deliverables. CELP is not subject-matter driven: Past projects have focused on criminal legal reform; environmental protection; reproductive justice; urban agriculture; education; and labor-related issues, among others.

The Community Empowerment Law Project is directed by Professor Daria Fisher Page.

Director

Daria Fisher Page (4)

Daria Fisher Page

Title/Position
Clinical Professor
Director, Community Empowerment Law Project

"A rising 2L and 3L should sign up for CELP because you'll get to work on an interesting project where you can directly help people in other communities. Professor Daria Fisher Page is so knowledgeable, and I would recommend joining CELP just to work with her.”

Grace Jobgen

Grace Jobgen

How to get involved

Students typically enroll in CELP for one semester at nine credits, approximately 27 – 36 hours/week. CELP does not have corequisite or prerequisite courses, though it is helpful to take Professional Responsibility before, or the same semester as, clinic. Students should bring curiosity, commitment, and creativity to their clinic experience.

Contact us

For general questions about the law clinic, please contact law-legal-clinic@uiowa.edu or 319-335-9034. For CELP-specific questions, you can email Professor Fisher Page.

Prospective clients

CELP typically identifies clients for the Fall semester in June or July and clients for the Spring semester in October or November. If you are interested in being a CELP client, please send an email to law-legal-clinic@uiowa.edu with the following information:

  • Individual Name
  • Individual Contact Info.
  • Organization (if relevant)
  • Description of the Project/Work/Problem (only a few sentences!)
  • Timeline (When would you want the students to work on the project and why?)

News

Clinic

The Clinical Advantage

At Iowa Law, students in the clinical education program receive real-world training while providing much-needed service to the community. Consisting of six clinics, each dedicated to a distinct practice area, the Law Clinic program gives students the opportunity to represent clients (under the supervision of licensed attorneys) at all stages of the legal process. Read on for a look at how the clinics continue to raise the bar for experiential education—despite the many challenges posed by COVID. 
A single tree in the middle of a large field during a beautiful sunset

Hubbell gift provides new environmental law opportunities and cross-disciplinary experience

The Hubbell Environmental Law Initiative (HELI), made possible by the $5 million gift from Iowa Law alumni Charlotte Beyer Hubbell (76JD) and Fred Hubbell (76JD), is helping the law school take its environmental law program to the next level.

Contact us

For more information, please contact the legal clinic at 319-335-9023 or law-legal-clinic@uiowa.edu.