Document Type

Article

Publication Date

1991

Abstract

In this Article, the author examines ways that legal aid advocacy organizations in the U.S. can utilize international human rights doctrine and procedures to advance the interests of poor and marginalized Americans in domestic and foreign venues. This is a sympathetic account of some of the efforts undertaken by legal services lawyers in this burgeoning field of law. The first section briefly describes the history and structure of the quasi-public legal aid programs funded by the Legal Services Corporation (LSC). Section two details practical reasons why attorneys may want to look to international instruments or forums to achieve their clients' objectives and to satisfy the bureaucratic limitations imposed by the LSC.

The third section provides synopses of actual cases in which legal aid attorneys have invoked international human rights law. These include cases filed in U.S. courts and international tribunals concerning protections for immigrants and language minorities, and the right to maternity leave and welfare payments. The last section offers observations on strategy and style, and forum and format, in utilizing unconventional arguments and modes of advocacy. The author recounts successes and challenges faced by practitioners who seek to combine the role of poverty lawyer with that of the international human rights advocate.

Share

COinS