Aaron Halegua (Harvard, May 2009; Summer Program, NYC 2011)
Anthony Kammer is a legal fellow in the Democracy Program at Demos, where he works on voting rights and campaign finance reform issues. He graduated in 2011 from Harvard Law School, where he was President of the Harvard Legal Theory Forum and a founding board member of the Student Association for Law and Mind Sciences. During law school, Anthony interned at the Exoneration Initiative and the Criminal Appeals Bureau at the Legal Aid Society, where he worked on criminal appeals. He also served as a summer intern at the Brennan Center for Justice where his work focused on immigration law, election law, and campaign finance reform. Anthony occasionally writes for PolicyShop.net and Notice & Comment: The Harvard Law & Policy Review Blog.
Anthony Kammer (Fordham, April 2012)
Anthony Kammer is a legal fellow in the Democracy Program at Demos, where he works on voting rights and campaign finance reform issues. He graduated in 2011 from Harvard Law School, where he was President of the Harvard Legal Theory Forum and a founding board member of the Student Association for Law and Mind Sciences. During law school, Anthony interned at the Exoneration Initiative and the Criminal Appeals Bureau at the Legal Aid Society, where he worked on criminal appeals. He also served as a summer intern at the Brennan Center for Justice where his work focused on immigration law, election law, and campaign finance reform. Anthony occasionally writes for PolicyShop.net and Notice & Comment: The Harvard Law & Policy Review Blog.
Josie Duffy (Summer Program, NYC 2011)
Josie is originally from Atlanta and went to college at Columbia. While in school, Josie studied Creative Writing and Political Science and worked for Mayor Kasim Reed, A.G. Kamala Harris, and the New Yorker. After graduating Josie worked for The Bronx Defenders, and this past summer she interned for the Equity and Excellence Commission at the Department of Education. Ultimately she hopes to work in criminal justice and prison reform. Josie is particularly fond of country music, Ohio State football, Ballet, and ice cream; but she likes pretty much everything except cold weather and cheese. Josie is currently a 2L at Harvard Law School.
Annie Hudson-Price (Summer Program, NYC 2011)
Annie Hudson-Price is a 2L at Harvard Law School. She spent the past summer interning at the Innocence Project New Orleans, an organization working to exonerate wrongfully convicted individuals in Louisiana and Mississippi. At Harvard she is a member of the Legal Aid Bureau and on the board of the Prison Legal Assistance Project (PLAP). Prior to law school Annie graduated with a B.A. in English from Yale University. She has also worked as a research assistant for journalist Philip Gourevitch and spent a year as a paralegal at the law firm Davis Polk and Wardwell.
Kevin G. (Summer Program, NYC 2011)
Kevin is currently a 2L at Harvard Law. He spent his first law school summer interning at the public defender’s office in Charlotte, North Carolina. As a 1L, Kevin worked for the Mississippi Delta Project and the Prison Legal Assistance Project. He is currently a vice co-chair of the Mississippi Delta Project, on the general board of the Civil Rights and Civil Liberties Law Review, and the treasurer of the Harvard Law School Democrats. Kevin began college at a community college in Florida and graduated from the College of the Holy Cross in 2010.
Ryan Park (Summer Program, NYC 2011)
Ryan Park is currently a law clerk for the Honorable Jed S. Rakoff, of the Southern District of New York, before which he attended Harvard Law School. During law school, Ryan was a student attorney in the Post-Eviction Foreclosure Housing Clinic, where he, among other things, represented tenants facing eviction in Boston Housing Court. He also interned at the legal adviser’s office at the U.S. Department of State, at the Human Rights Law Network in Delhi, India, and at the Documentation Center of Cambodia, in Phnom Penh. Prior to law school, Ryan taught in South Korea on a Fulbright Fellowship, worked as a civil intake counselor at Women Empowered Against Violence (WEAVE) in Washington, DC, and was a paralegal in the Antitrust Division of the U.S. Department of Justice. He is a graduate of Amherst College.
Joy Wang (Hunter College, April 2011; Summer Program, NYC 2011)
Joy Wang is a 2010 graduate of Harvard Law School and is currently working as a public defender in Manhattan. While in law school, she also held internships with the United Nations on labor rights and human trafficking, the Department of Justice Civil Rights Division, the Asian-American Legal Defense Fund, and the ACLU immigrant rights project. Prior to law school, Joy completed a doctorate from Oxford University on a Rhodes Scholarship and taught postcolonial literature at Brooklyn College CUNY.