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Graduate Legal Fellow Jobs (NOW HIRING)

The fellowship itself would begin in fall 2027, so the applicant must graduate no later than summer 2027. The ACLU-DC has been successful in the past in hosting legal fellows with externally-funded ...

New

The fellowship itself would begin in fall 2027, so the applicant must graduate no later than summer 2027. The ACLU-DC has been successful in the past in hosting legal fellows with externally-funded ...

New

Legal Fellow

Ossining, NY ยท On-site

$60K - $70K/yr

Legal Fellow DEPARTMENT: Legal REPORTS TO: Legal Program Director SALARY: $60,000-$70,000 SCHEDULE ... Ossining, NY; hybrid role POSITION DESCRIPTION Riverkeeper seeks a recent law school graduate who ...

Legal Fellow DEPARTMENT: Legal REPORTS TO: Legal Program Director SALARY: $60,000-$70,000 SCHEDULE ... Ossining, NY; hybrid role POSITION DESCRIPTION Riverkeeper seeks a recent law school graduate who ...

Legal Fellow

Ossining, NY ยท On-site

$60K - $70K/yr

Legal Fellow DEPARTMENT: Legal REPORTS TO: Legal Program Director SALARY: $60,000-$70,000 SCHEDULE ... Ossining, NY; hybrid role POSITION DESCRIPTION Riverkeeper seeks a recent law school graduate who ...

Fall 2026 Legal Fellow

Newark, NJ ยท On-site

$74K/yr

ACLU-NJ Legal Fellow Fall 2026 The American Civil Liberties Union of New Jersey (ACLU-NJ) seeks ... Compensation The starting salary for a 2026 graduate is $74,000. The ACLU-NJ supports and plans for ...

ACLU-NJ Legal Fellow Fall 2026 The American Civil Liberties Union of New Jersey (ACLU-NJ) seeks ... Compensation The starting salary for a 2026 graduate is $74,000. The ACLU-NJ supports and plans for ...

Civil Rights Legal Fellow

Anaheim, CA ยท On-site

$70K - $85K/yr

Civil Rights Legal Fellow Work Location: Anaheim, CA Position Status: Exempt, Temporary, Full-Time ... graduate or practicing attorney with up to three years of experience to work on priority issues ...

Civil Rights Legal Fellow

Anaheim, CA ยท On-site

$70K - $85K/yr

Civil Rights Legal Fellow Work Location: Anaheim, CA Position Status: Exempt, Temporary, Full-Time ... graduate or practicing attorney with up to three years of experience to work on priority issues ...

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Graduate Legal Fellow information

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How much do graduate legal fellow jobs pay per year?

As of Jun 11, 2026, the average yearly pay for graduate legal fellow in the United States is $55,419.00, according to ZipRecruiter salary data. Most workers in this role earn between $40,000.00 and $62,500.00 per year, depending on experience, location, and employer.

What are the key skills and qualifications needed to thrive as a Graduate Legal Fellow, and why are they important?

To thrive as a Graduate Legal Fellow, you need a Juris Doctor (JD) degree, strong legal research and writing abilities, and a solid understanding of relevant legal principles. Familiarity with legal research databases like Westlaw and LexisNexis, as well as proficiency in drafting legal documents, is typically required. Outstanding analytical thinking, attention to detail, and effective communication skills help fellows excel in supporting attorneys and collaborating on complex cases. These skills are crucial for producing high-quality legal work and contributing meaningfully to the organization's goals.

What is a Graduate Legal Fellow?

A Graduate Legal Fellow is a recent law school graduate who undertakes a temporary fellowship position, often at a law firm, nonprofit organization, government agency, or academic institution. These fellowships typically last one to two years and provide new lawyers with practical legal experience, mentorship, and specialized training in a particular area of law. Graduate Legal Fellows may work on litigation, research, policy analysis, or advocacy projects, depending on the host organization. The position helps fellows build professional networks and improve their career prospects in the legal field.

What types of projects and responsibilities can a Graduate Legal Fellow expect during their fellowship?

As a Graduate Legal Fellow, you can expect to work on a range of projects including legal research, drafting memos or briefs, and supporting ongoing litigation or policy initiatives. Fellows often collaborate with senior attorneys and staff on client matters, attend hearings or meetings, and may have opportunities to engage in community outreach or educational events. The role typically offers a structured environment with regular feedback, making it an excellent opportunity to develop practical legal skills while gaining exposure to different areas of law.

What is the difference between Graduate Legal Fellow vs Legal Intern?

AspectGraduate Legal FellowLegal Intern
Required CredentialsJuris Doctor (JD) or in final year of law schoolEnrolled in law school or recent graduate
Work EnvironmentFull-time or part-time position, often with more responsibilitiesTemporary, part-time, or summer position with limited responsibilities
Employer & Industry UsageLegal organizations, nonprofits, government agenciesLaw firms, legal departments, nonprofits

Graduate Legal Fellows typically hold a JD or are in their final year of law school, working in more responsible roles compared to Legal Interns, who are usually law students gaining initial experience. Fellows often have longer-term commitments and more complex tasks, whereas Interns focus on learning and supporting legal work. Both roles are valuable for gaining legal experience, but Fellows are more advanced in their legal career development.

More about Graduate Legal Fellow jobs
Infographic showing various Graduate Legal Fellow job openings in the United States as of June 2026, with employment types broken down into 51% Full Time, 44% Part Time, and 5% Contract. Highlights an 94% Physical, 2% Hybrid, and 4% Remote job distribution, with an average salary of $55,419 per year, or $26.6 per hour.

Legal Fellow

ACLU of DC

Washington, DC โ€ข On-site

Other

Medical, Retirement, PTO

Posted yesterday


Job description

Salary: $87,880

CALL FOR APPLICANTS FOR FELLOW SPONSORSHIP ACLU OF THE
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA


The American Civil Liberties Union of the District of Columbia (ACLU-DC) seeks a law student
or recent law school graduate to sponsor as an Equal Justice Works, Justice Catalyst, Soros, or
other externally-funded (including law school funded) public service fellowship candidate for the
fall 2026 application process. The fellowship itself would begin in fall 2027, so the applicant must
graduate no later than summer 2027. The ACLU-DC has been successful in the past in hosting
legal fellows with externally-funded public service fellowships.


The ACLU-DC is an affiliate office of the American Civil Liberties Union, a national nonprofit
organization devoted to the protection of civil liberties and civil rights through litigation,
legislation, organizing, and public education. The ACLU-DC works primarily on issues that
directly impact people who live in, work in, and visit the District of Columbia, and also on
challenges to certain federal government policies and practices where they fall within the
jurisdiction of the D.C. federal courts.


Among the matters currently on our docket are: representing Black Lives Matter-DC and
individual activists in challenging the attack by federal and local law enforcement on civil rights
demonstrators in Lafayette Square on June 1, 2020; a lawsuit seeking to reform the Districts
practice of sending police and not trained mental health professionals to respond to individuals
experiencing mental health crises; the representation of two D.C. agency workers who faced
discrimination based on their family responsibilities (child care) in the application of remote work
policies; a challenge to the D.C. police departments practice of retaining arrestees cell phones
for months or years after the owners are released or charges are dropped; and eighteen cases against
policies and practices of the second Trump administration including on immigration, trans rights,
voting rights, federal workers rights, and freedom of speech. (Please note that our fellows tend to
focus more on our cases challenging D.C. policies and practices than federal.)


To learn more about our work, visit acludc.org.


NATURE OF FELLOWSHIP
The ACLU-DC seeks rising third-year law students, judicial clerks, and law school graduates to
sponsor for externally-funded one- or two-year legal fellowships. We will work with a successful
applicant to develop a project proposal to submit to funding organizations. Please note that the
ACLU-DC does not have independent internal funding for this fellowship position; we seek
to host an externally-funded fellow only.


Applicants will be asked to submit ideas for a project proposal relating to civil liberties and civil
rights in Washington, D.C. Proposed projects often combine impact litigation, policy advocacy,
and public education.


Proposals should include a short description of the problem your project seeks to address, concrete
strategies and tools to address the problem, goals for what you want to accomplish during the
fellowship, and why you are the best candidate for this fellowship project. We understand that
project proposals may be broad at this stage.


Likelihood of obtaining funding will be a consideration (so, for instance, having access to
additional school-based funding opportunities would be advantageous).


Past legal fellows have had the opportunity to develop their own cases and serve as lead counsel,
testify before the D.C. Council, conduct Know Your Rights trainings, take depositions, argue in
court, and speak on behalf of the ACLU-DC to national and local media outlets.


We will supplement the amount of the fellowship stipend so that the fellow will receive a salary
of no less than $87,880 per year, dependent on years since law school graduation. Benefits
currently provided to all ACLU-DC employees (including externally-funded fellows) include
employer-paid health insurance, vacation and sick leave, and 401(k) availability with partial
employer match.


This position is a member of the ACLU-DC staff bargaining unit represented by the Washington
Baltimore News Guild and is exempt under the Fair Labor Standards Act.


QUALIFICATIONS

  • By fall 2027, you will have obtained a J.D. and either be a D.C. Bar member or will seek
    admission during the fellowship.
  • You have excellent work ethic, including dependability, diligence, the ability to take ownership
    over projects, and the commitment to see projects through to completion in a fast-paced,
    collaborative environment.
  • You are receptive to feedback, enthusiastic about learning and self-improvement, and eager to
    incorporate feedback into future work.
  • You have excellent legal research skills, including the judgment to discern what cases are relevant
    to a particular research question, and thoroughness in covering the question asked.
  • You have the capacity to engage in thoughtful and perceptive legal analysis, including the ability
    to build a logical and persuasive argument, to read and understand legal decisions and statutes, and
    to grasp whether and how legal authorities apply to a new set of facts.
  • You have excellent legal writing skills, including the ability to present ideas in a clear and
    organized manner and to write a memo that teaches the reader what you have learned through
    research (whether the meaning of a specific case or the state of a body of law in general).
  • You have the empathy and interpersonal skills necessary to connect with, listen to, learn from,
    advise, and work collaboratively with clients and other community members.
  • Your experience includes at least one clinical semester, one externship semester, or one summer
    internship working in a U.S. litigation setting involving legal research and writing.
  • You meet the eligibility criteria for one or more externally-funded fellowships that would fund a
    fellowship at the ACLU-DC.
  • You must be legally authorized to work in the United States.


TO APPLY
The deadline for applying is 11:59pm Eastern time on Sunday, July 12, 2026, but our
evaluation of candidates is rolling, so earlier submission is advantageous. To apply, complete
the application at www.acludc.org/careers. If you require accommodation(s) to complete the
application, please email operations@acludc.org.


Please submit:


  1. A copy of your resume that lists relevant experience.
  2. A detailed cover letter explaining your interest in this fellowship, the nature of your proposed
    project and the population you seek to serve, and why you are well-suited to carry out this
    particular project.
  3. A list of three references, including a sentence about each one identifying what information the
    person can provide. At least one of your references should be a practicing attorney.
  4. Your law school transcript (may be official or unofficial).
  5. A writing sample that is your own work, with a brief explanatory note describing the extent of
    others involvement, if any (e.g. I wrote this draft entirely myself with no input or This is a
    second draft based on feedback from a supervisor but its all my own writing or the like). This
    sample should be no more than 10 pages, and may be a section of a larger document (with a
    cover note explaining the context if its unclear from the sample alone). The sample must be a
    litigation-related document containing legal analysis or argument, such as a brief, motion, or
    research or strategy memo about potential litigation. Complaints and academic articles do not
    qualify.
  6. A separate statement indicating whether, if your application for an Equal Justice Works, Justice
    Catalyst or other externally-funded public service fellowship at ACLU-DC is unsuccessful,
    your law school has a program that could fund a fellowship at ACLU-DC, and if so, what rules
    govern the allocation of such school-based fellowships, how many such fellowships are
    awarded each year, and any conditions attached to such funding (such as a requirement to
    continue to apply for jobs during the fellowship year).



The ACLU-DC is an equal opportunity employer. We value a diverse workforce and an inclusive
culture. The ACLU-DC encourages applications from all qualified individuals without regard to
race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity and expression, age, national origin,
marital status, citizenship, disability, veteran status, or any other classification protected by the
D.C. Human Rights Act or federal employment law. If you have a disability and need a reasonable
accommodation regarding any part of the application process, please include your
accommodation request(s) in your application email. We are responsive to reasonable
accommodation requests at any point during the application process.