Jobs

Please send an email to jobs@cleaweb.org if you would like to post a position on our jobs board. Submit the job positing as a Word document or in the body of the e-mail. The postings are updated on a weekly basis.

  • 01 Dec 2017 9:36 AM | Lauren Bartlett (Administrator)

    THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SCHOOL OF LAW seeks a clinical associate professor to teach in our Lawyering Skills program starting fall 2018.  The professor will work collaboratively with other clinical faculty in the program.  This position forms an integral part of a skills-training program, which introduces first-year students to real world legal practice skills including legal writing, research, and analysis, as well as negotiation, mediation, and oral argument.   This professor also participates actively in other aspects of the upper-division skills curriculum.  At least once per academic year, this professor also instructs students in upper-division legal writing courses or teach one section of a for-JD-credit, bar-preparation course. 
     
    Although their primary responsibility is teaching and professional performance, clinical professors are also expected to engage in scholarship and service to the profession.  This regular, full-time, nine-month, unclassified academic staff position is a clinical professor track position within the law school, which after probationary periods and reviews obtains job security provisions that comply with ABA Standard 405(c).
     
    Required Qualifications:  JD from an ABA accredited law school; admitted to a bar of a state, the District of Columbia, or a U.S. territory, and; at least 5 years of post J.D. legal experience, which may include legal practice, judicial clerkship, non-bar licensed professional experience in a “J.D. advantage” role, teaching fellowship or any such combination of comparable legal experience.
     
    Information and Application Procedures:
     
    Applicant contact:         Lou Mulligan, Associate Dean, Faculty and Professor of Law
                                              785-864-9219 or lumen@ku.edu  
     
    Review of applications begins on 02/05/18 and continues as needed to collect a pool of qualified applicants.  To ensure consideration, apply before the application review date.  To apply go to:  https://employment.ku.edu/academic/10479BR
     
    A complete application includes the online application and a 1) cover letter, 2) curriculum vitae, 3) statement of research/teaching interests, and 4) the names of three professional references to include addresses, phone numbers, and e-mail addresses. Applications will be kept confidential until candidates agree that references may be contacted.
     
    KU is an EO/AAE.  All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex (including pregnancy), age, national origin, disability, genetic information or protected Veteran status.
     

  • 28 Nov 2017 9:43 AM | Lauren Bartlett (Administrator)

    WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF LAW invites applications for the position of Director of its new Immigration Law Clinic. The Clinic will begin operation in the Fall semester 2018 and join the Law School’s eighteen other law clinic and externships (see http://law.wustl.edu/clinicaled).

    The Immigration Clinic, through its second- and third-year law students, will provide free legal assistance on immigration related matters to individuals who cannot otherwise afford the services of an attorney. Clinic students will assist clients on matters such as naturalization, deportation, adjustment of status, and asylum.

    The Director is expected to oversee all aspects of the Clinic, including the teaching of students (through one-on-one tutorials and a weekly seminar), supervision of and responsibility for student casework, identification and selection of clients, and administration of the office and staff. The Director will also teach non-clinic courses each year.

    Qualifications

    Candidates must be eligible to practice law in Missouri (i.e., must be a member of the Missouri bar or eligible for admission as a law teacher without examination pursuant to Missouri Supreme Court Rule 13.06). Candidates should have significant experience practicing immigration law, outstanding legal research and writing skills, and promise as a teacher and mentor for law students.

    Application Process

    Applicants must complete an online application by navigating to https://jobs.wustl.edu/ and searching for job opening number 38639.

    In addition to completing the online application, applicants should submit a resume, law school transcript, references, and brief description of the candidate’s interest and qualifications to: Professor Robert Kuehn, Associate Dean for Clinical Education, Washington University School of Law, One Brookings Drive, Campus Box 1120, St. Louis, MO 63130-4899; rkuehn@wustl.edu.

    EOE Statement

    Washington University is an Equal Opportunity Employer. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, age, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity or expression, national origin, genetic information, disability, or protected veteran status.

  • 21 Nov 2017 4:13 PM | Lauren Bartlett (Administrator)

    The Rutgers Law School, Newark campus has an opening for a full-time, clinical professor to teach in our Civil Justice Clinic (and likely to direct that clinic), commencing at the start of the 2018-19 academic year and available to begin teaching in the Fall 2018 term.   To apply and for more information, please visit: http://jobs.rutgers.edu/postings/55621

    The Rutgers Civil Justice Clinic  (CRC) (formerly Urban Legal Clinic) is one of the school’s oldest clinics  and was founded by Professor Annamay Sheppard, the former director of Newark's first legal services program, in 1970. It is the law's school's first direct service clinic and its work includes supervised student representation of low-income, individual clients in a wide range of civil cases including landlord- tenant, consumer, family law, and public benefit cases. For the past 15 years it has been directed by Clinical Professor Jack Feinstein who has worked in this clinic since the early 1980s and is retiring in December 2017.  There are 16 in-house clinics at Rutgers (11 in Newark) and our more than 20 full-time clinical faculty members all at least have ABA Standard 405(c)  faculty voting rights and long-term job security-- either presumptively renewable long-term contracts on our clinical professor track or traditional tenure  (or are on track for one or the other).  This position will be a  clinical track position.  Candidates should have at least 3-5 years of relevant civil practice lawyering experience, preferably in the areas of landlord-tenant law and either consumer or family law.  Previous clinical  and other law teaching experience is a big plus. Scholarship will be a component of advancement on the clinical track and will be supported by the law school. The candidate's scholarship can be directed to other clinical educators, lawyers, judges and non-academic audiences in addition to other academic audiences. The position provides good fringe benefits and a competitive salary based on relevant experience.    

  • 15 Nov 2017 11:04 AM | Lauren Bartlett (Administrator)

    OHIO NORTHERN UNIVERSITY in Ada, Ohio, seeks applications and nominations for the position of Dean of the Claude W. Pettit College of Law. A successful candidate will build on the College’s strengths, while navigating the challenges currently facing law schools, so that the College is well-positioned for the future. Applicants must have a Juris Doctor, or equivalent degree, and a history of scholarly productivity and/or relevant professional experience that would allow for tenure within the Pettit College of Law at the rank of Professor. Desired qualifications include: demonstrated administrative ability, experience in budgeting, fiscal management, assessment, and management of law admissions with a strong connection to legal practice and bar organizations. Personal scholarly activity with demonstrated support for faculty scholarship and engagement as well as experience in higher education development, alumni relations, and legal education are equally important. For a more detailed profile of the position, please go to https://www.onu.edu/academic_affairs/dean_law.  

    Nominations and expressions of interest may be sent electronically to Ted Ford Webb at  Pettit@fordwebb.com  or 978-371-4900.

  • 09 Nov 2017 11:18 AM | Lauren Bartlett (Administrator)

    THE UNIVERSITY OF DAYTON SCHOOL OF LAW invites applications for one Assistant Professor of Academic Success. This is a non-tenure track position with an initial appointment of one year and the possibility of renewal for long-term (three or five-year) appointments after three years of satisfactory service.

    The focus of the Academic Success Program at the School of Law is to help students develop the skills necessary for law school success and first-time bar passage. Responsibilities of the Assistant Professor of Academic Success will include:

    • teaching academic success courses related to legal reasoning, critical reading, exam- writing, and bar examination preparation;
    • providing academic advising and professional development counseling for students;
    • supervising and evaluating the Law School’s Learning Communities program, including designing student-led sessions and working with upper-level Dean’s Fellows;
    • participating in the larger community for academic success professionals through regular attendance or presentations at conferences and other relevant endeavors to support the faculty member’s professional development;
    • delivering and assessing a comprehensive program of academic support from orientation until graduation.

    Applicants must have a J.D. degree from and a record of high academic achievement at an ABA- accredited law school and recent experience in legal education or law teaching in an American law school, particularly in designing and teaching academic success courses or those related to legal reasoning, critical reading, exam-writing, and/or bar examination preparation. Applicants must also articulate a commitment to academic support, including implementing the best models and practices available to encourage student success and utilizing recent developments in pedagogy in American law schools.

    We prefer candidates with:

    • Demonstrate a commitment to academic support, including implementing best models and practices available to encourage student success and utilizing recent developments in pedagogy in American law schools;
    • Demonstrate successful experience providing effective academic advising and professional development counseling for students;
    • Recent successful experience developing and administering structured intervention and counseling programs for at-risk students;
    • Recent successful program administration, including delivering and assessing all aspects of a program, especially if the experience relates to academic support;
    • Demonstrate successful experience compiling and analyzing data for statistical analysis, including familiarity with the most commonly used statistical software programs;
    • Excellent written and oral communication skills, including effective presentation skills;
    • Effective interpersonal communication skills with various constituencies;
    • Ability to work collaboratively with colleagues;
    • Demonstrate successful experience mentoring and working with students from diverse backgrounds; and
    • Expressed willingness to engage with Catholic and Marianist educational values.

    The University of Dayton, founded in 1850 by the Society of Mary, is a top ten Catholic research university.  The University seeks outstanding, diverse faculty and staff who value its mission and share its commitment to academic excellence in teaching, research and artistic creativity, the development of the whole person, and leadership and service in the local and global community.

    To attain its Catholic and Marianist mission, the University is committed to the principles of diversity, inclusion and affirmative action and to equal opportunity policies and practices.  As an Affirmative Action and Equal Opportunity Employer, we will not discriminate against  minorities, females, protected veterans, individuals with disabilities, or on the basis of sexual orientation or gender identity.

    Applications will be accepted until November 21, 2017. To be considered as a candidate for this position, you must apply online at: http://jobs.udayton.edu/postings/24704  Cover letter and CV should be submitted electronically on the website at the time of application. The cover letter should address the applicant’s ability to meet the minimum and preferred qualifications. For more information about the School of Law or the Academic Support Program, please visit our website at http://www.udayton.edu/law or contact the chair of the hiring committee, Professor Victoria VanZandt, University of Dayton School of Law, 300 College Park, Dayton, Ohio 45469-2772.


  • 09 Nov 2017 11:13 AM | Lauren Bartlett (Administrator)

    THE BERKELEY LAW POLICY ADVOCACY CLINIC (PAC) is seeking to hire a Research & Policy Fellow to undertake clinic-related research on criminal justice policy reform. In particular, the fellow will work on research projects studying the impact of criminal justice debt (fines, fees and restitution) on youth in the juvenile justice system and homeless people.

    In PAC, interdisciplinary teams of law and public policy students pursue high-impact, non- litigation strategies on behalf of underrepresented individuals and groups to address systemic racial, economic and social injustice in the community. PAC’s approach is bottom-up (grounded in the lives of real people), problem-based (addressing pressing social issues) and client-driven (accountable to actual organizational clients). Students learn to support change campaigns at the local, state and national level.

    Under the supervision of PAC faculty, the Research & Policy Fellow will:

    • Research and write academic-quality articles or reports on clinic-related criminal justice reform;
    • Research and write white papers and opinion pieces directed at policymakers and other audiences beyond academia;
    • Organize workshops, conferences, talks, and meetings with lawyers, policymakers, and other criminal justice stakeholders;
    • Identify and manage research initiatives that intersect with and add value to clinic projects;
    • Collaborate closely with JD, MPP, PhD students and faculty on clinic projects; and
    • Speak at conferences, meetings and to the press about the research.

    Minimum Qualifications Required (at the time of application):

    • Candidate must hold a J.D. or equivalent degree; OR
    • Master’s Degree or equivalent degree in Public Policy; OR
    • Ph.D. or equivalent degree
    • Preferred Qualifications:
    • Experience conducting and publishing high-quality quantitative and qualitative research
    • Excellent analytical, communication and writing skills
    • Substantive knowledge of criminal justice policy and reform
    • Interest in pursuing an academic or policy career

    Application Procedure:

    Please visit the following link to apply: http://apptrkr.com/1109828.

    Applications must include in pdf format four (4) documents: (1) a cover letter, (2) a curriculum vitae, (3) a statement of research interests, and (4) a sample of written work (such as a policy brief, comment letter, white paper, or equivalent of no more than 10 pages).

    Applicants must also provide in AP Recruit the names and contact information for three (3) references.

    The position will remain open until filled.

    Letters of reference may be requested at a future date. References should be from persons who are familiar with the applicant’s written work and qualifications for the position. All letters will be treated as confidential per University of California policy. Please refer potential referees, including when letters are provided via a third party (i.e., dossier service or career center), to the UC Berkeley statement of confidentiality (http://apo.berkeley.edu/evalltr.html) prior to submitting their letters.

    Applicants should be prepared to begin work in early 2018. For more information about PAC, visit our website at https://www.law.berkeley.edu/experiential/clinics/policy-advocacy-clinic/.

    Inquiries may be addressed to academicpositions@law.berkeley.edu.

    Berkeley Law is interested in candidates who will contribute to diversity and equal opportunity in higher education through their teaching or research. Qualified women and members of underrepresented groups are strongly encouraged to apply.

    The University of California is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, disability, age or protected veteran status. For the complete University of California nondiscrimination and affirmative action policy see: http://policy.ucop.edu/doc/4000376/NondiscrimAffirmAct.

    JOB LOCATION: 

    • Berkeley, CA

    LEARN MORE: 

    REQUIRED DOCUMENTS:

    • Cover Letter
    • Curriculum Vitae - Your most recently updated C.V.
    • Statement of Research Interests
    • Sample of Written Work - Such as a policy brief, comment letter, white paper, or equivalent of no more than 10 pages

    REFERENCES:

    • 3 references required (contact information only)


  • 06 Nov 2017 1:55 PM | Lauren Bartlett (Administrator)

    DC LAW STUDENTS IN COURT (LSIC) invites applications for a full-time Housing Law Attorney to begin immediately. The Attorney will be responsible for legal representation of low-income residents of Washington, DC in landlord and tenant disputes and housing related cases.

    About DC Law Students in Court:

    Created in 1969, LSIC is the oldest and one of the most highly regarded clinical programs in the city. LSIC is a nonprofit public interest law firm and clinical education program that draws students from area law schools in Washington, DC. Since our founding, LSIC has trained law students to provide free, high-quality legal services to the District’s low-income community. We are on a mission to empower individuals to stand up against injustice and inspire the next generation of social justice advocates.

    LSIC embraces diversity as a core value. We recognize that our success as an organization depends on creating and maintaining a diverse team of talented professionals, and we are committed to a workplace that reflects and supports diverse individual backgrounds and perspectives. Our commitment to diversity, inclusion, and non-discrimination includes race, sex, age, religion, national origin, sexual orientation, gender identity/expression, personal appearance, genetic information, political affiliation, marital status, family responsibilities, disability and status as a veteran, and any other characteristic protected by federal, state, or local laws or regulation. We strive to have a workplace that is comfortable and welcoming for everyone.

    Position Responsibilities:

    Responsibilities include: 1) Building relationships with community and tenant groups and providing regular presentations on tenant rights, and landlord-tenant law and procedure; 2) Providing leadership, staffing, and support for staff attorney-centered initiatives that increase LSIC’s ability to understand and improve the quality of LSIC services; 3) Developing and maintaining effective time-management and organizational skills in manner that allows adequate time to track and abide by deadlines, prepare cases, complete administrative paperwork and time sheets, and respect co-workers’ time constraints; 4) Conducting client intake at DC Superior Court one to two days per week; 5) Coordinating intake with present LSIC staff and other court-based legal service providers; 6) Zealously and competently executing all phases of client advocacy so as to reach the best result possible for the client under the circumstances of the case; 7) Behaving in a professional manner so as to uphold the integrity and enhance the professional reputation of the attorney and the office; 8) completing administrative and other clinic work such as recruiting students and training and mentoring pro bono attorneys. Related duties include participating in weekly case acceptance conferences, attending staff meetings, participating in agency fundraising and development opportunities and events, overseeing the accurate and complete input of data in the office’s case management system, and providing input and comment regarding student grades.

    Qualification Requirements:

    The Staff/Housing Law Attorney must be a member of the D.C. Bar, have prior litigation experience, excellent communication skills, ability to work independently and as part of a team, ability to work in a fast-paced litigation environment and have a desire to serve the community. Preferred qualifications include Spanish language skills, housing or consumer litigation experience, and prior legal services experience. LSIC alumni are encouraged to apply.

    Accountability: Reports to the Civil Director

    Hours and Salary: This is a full-time position based on a 40 hour work week. Salary is commensurate with experience.

    Benefits: We offer an excellent benefits package for this full-time position including employer-paid medical, dental, and vision insurance, generous accrued sick leave, annual leave, and personal leave and paid federal holidays.

    To Apply: Each candidate should submit a cover letter and resume by email to Trevor Osterhaus, Business & Operations Manager, tosterhaus@dclawstudents.org. Please indicate “Staff Attorney, [your full name] and [your favorite U.S. Supreme Court case]” in the subject of the email.

    Application Deadline: Applications will be accepted until the position is filled.

  • 06 Nov 2017 12:47 PM | Lauren Bartlett (Administrator)

    DC LAW STUDENTS IN COURT (LSIC) invites applications for a full-time Housing Law Attorney to begin immediately. The Attorney will be responsible for legal representation of low-income residents of Washington, DC in landlord and tenant disputes and housing related cases.

    About DC Law Students in Court:

    Created in 1969, LSIC is the oldest and one of the most highly regarded clinical programs in the city. LSIC is a nonprofit public interest law firm and clinical education program that draws students from area law schools in Washington, DC. Since our founding, LSIC has trained law students to provide free, high-quality legal services to the District’s low-income community. We are on a mission to empower individuals to stand up against injustice and inspire the next generation of social justice advocates.

    LSIC embraces diversity as a core value. We recognize that our success as an organization depends on creating and maintaining a diverse team of talented professionals, and we are committed to a workplace that reflects and supports diverse individual backgrounds and perspectives. Our commitment to diversity, inclusion, and non-discrimination includes race, sex, age, religion, national origin, sexual orientation, gender identity/expression, personal appearance, genetic information, political affiliation, marital status, family responsibilities, disability and status as a veteran, and any other characteristic protected by federal, state, or local laws or regulation. We strive to have a workplace that is comfortable and welcoming for everyone.

    Position Responsibilities:

    Responsibilities include: 1) Building relationships with community and tenant groups and providing regular presentations on tenant rights, and landlord-tenant law and procedure; 2) Providing leadership, staffing, and support for staff attorney-centered initiatives that increase LSIC’s ability to understand and improve the quality of LSIC services; 3) Developing and maintaining effective time-management and organizational skills in manner that allows adequate time to track and abide by deadlines, prepare cases, complete administrative paperwork and time sheets, and respect co-workers’ time constraints; 4) Conducting client intake at DC Superior Court one to two days per week; 5) Coordinating intake with present LSIC staff and other court-based legal service providers; 6) Zealously and competently executing all phases of client advocacy so as to reach the best result possible for the client under the circumstances of the case; 7) Behaving in a professional manner so as to uphold the integrity and enhance the professional reputation of the attorney and the office; 8) completing administrative and other clinic work such as recruiting students and training and mentoring pro bono attorneys. Related duties include participating in weekly case acceptance conferences, attending staff meetings, participating in agency fundraising and development opportunities and events, overseeing the accurate and complete input of data in the office’s case management system, and providing input and comment regarding student grades.

    Qualification Requirements:

    The Staff/Housing Law Attorney must be a member of the D.C. Bar, have prior litigation experience, excellent communication skills, ability to work independently and as part of a team, ability to work in a fast-paced litigation environment and have a desire to serve the community. Preferred qualifications include Spanish language skills, housing or consumer litigation experience, and prior legal services experience. LSIC alumni are encouraged to apply.

    Accountability: Reports to the Civil Director

    Hours and Salary: This is a full-time position based on a 40 hour work week. Salary is commensurate with experience.

    Benefits: We offer an excellent benefits package for this full-time position including employer-paid medical, dental, and vision insurance, generous accrued sick leave, annual leave, and personal leave and paid federal holidays.

    To Apply: Each candidate should submit a cover letter and resume by email to Trevor Osterhaus, Business & Operations Manager, tosterhaus@dclawstudents.org. Please indicate “Staff Attorney, [your full name] and [your favorite U.S. Supreme Court case]” in the subject of the email.

    Application Deadline: Applications will be accepted until the position is filled.


  • 03 Nov 2017 1:40 PM | Lauren Bartlett (Administrator)

    THE GEORGE WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY LAW SCHOOL’s Jacob Burns Community Legal Clinics announce the availability of new graduate clinical fellowships for the academic years of 2018-20.  In recognition of the generous gift of Philip Friedman, the Fellows are known as Friedman Fellows.   

    The 2018-20 Friedman Fellowships begin in the summer of 2018.  Fellows are assigned to the specific law school clinic that matches their background and experience. Although different clinics provide Fellows different responsibilities and experiences, each clinic provides a Fellow with opportunities to co-teach and co-supervise, alongside experienced clinical faculty, the law students enrolled in the clinic.

    The Friedman Fellowship program affords every Fellow the opportunity to learn about 1) clinical education and public interest lawyering through the practice of engaging in each, 2) teaching and supervising law students engaged in these activities, and 3) participating in a program of study in which these are the primary topics of inquiry. Throughout their two years in residence, Fellows can receive specific instruction and guidance in teaching and supervising clinical law students, and in writing scholarship for publication.  The program provides Fellows with mentorship and support from the clinical faculty and administration, and from the law school in general.

    We are currently seeking applications from candidates with strong academic, clinical, and lawyering experience.  We are especially interested in applications from lawyers with background and experience in the following areas: civil legal aid practice, community economic development law, criminal defense practice, cyberviolence, domestic violence, family law litigation, prisoner re-entry issues, small business and nonprofit law, and transactional law. 

    Fellows receive an annual stipend of $60,000 and are eligible for university employment benefits, such as health insurance, tuition assistance, and other benefits related to law school affiliation.  Fellows must be members of a state bar. Candidates who are not members of the D.C. Bar must be eligible for immediate waiver into the D.C. Bar.

    By November 30, 2017, each applicant should send a letter of interest, a resume, a list of references, and a complete law school transcript to clinicadmin@law.gwu.edu. Questions can also be submitted to clinicadmin@law.gwu.edu.  The George Washington University Law School is an Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity employer. The University undertakes special efforts to employ a diverse workforce.

  • 02 Nov 2017 3:22 PM | Lauren Bartlett (Administrator)

    HARVARD LAW SCHOOL is seeking a Clinical Instructor for the Transactional Law Clinics (TLC), consisting of the Business and Non-Profit Clinic, Entertainment Law Clinic, Community Enterprise Project, and Real Estate Clinic. TLC seeks a Clinical Instructor who has background as a transactional attorney in one or more of the aforementioned practice areas and the ability and interest to learn new practice areas in one or more of the areas not already possessed. The Clinical Instructor will teach, mentor, supervise, evaluate and structure the practice work of law school students and will represent clients of the TLC clinics. Clinical students consist of second and third year law school students. The Clinical Instructor may also be requested to assist with a student practice organizations existing under the TLC (namely, Harvard Law Entrepreneurs Project or the Recording Artist Project, which include some 1L students). TLC clients consist of individuals, small businesses, entrepreneurs, organizations and groups engaged in transactional activities. The Clinical Instructor also will be involved in assisting with the development of clinic and class curriculum and the overall learning experience of the students, their clinical practice and training.

    The Clinical Instructor will teach, mentor, supervise, evaluate and structure the practice work of law school students and will represent clients of the TLC clinics. In addition, the Clinical Instructor will assist in the marketing and community outreach efforts of TLC by supporting the clinics’ endeavors to develop and nurture relationships with client communities and community-based organizations and client populations, adding to the clinic’s visible presence in such areas through meeting attendance, participation in and organization of workshops, and periodic on-sight availability at community-based locations to conduct new client intake and interface with clients and community partners.  The Clinical Instructor will also work with the Director and clinic colleagues to identify new opportunities for enhancement of prospective client and community connections, as well as to develop, manage and document outreach campaigns for the clinics’, including through the use of available technologies to create public speaking presentations on transactional legal issues.

    Basic Qualifications

    JD Degree, and a minimum of 5 years of relevant legal experience.  Similar years of experience with formal mentoring and supervision of law students or junior attorneys.  Admission to Massachusetts Bar required.

    Additional Qualifications

    The Clinical Instructor must have the skills (derived either from an academic or law firm setting), disposition and desire necessary to work with clinic colleagues in a team-oriented collegial academic setting, and to work with, supervise, mentor and evaluate law students, in addition to the demonstrated law practice abilities and skills to engage in high quality legal practice and to independently oversee a substantial case load. Ability to work independently, as well as in teams, and in occasionally demanding, high stress circumstances.  Strong oral and written communication and organizational skills; strong motivation, initiative, demonstrated ability to work creatively within broad program goals.  Strong motivation to learn and achieve superior professional practice and mentoring skills.  Strong organization, time management, case management and documentation skills.

    Additional Information

    This is a 5 year term appointment, subject to funding and departmental need.

    For the full job description and to apply, visit: https://sjobs.brassring.com/TGnewUI/Search/home/HomeWithPreLoad?PageType=JobDetails&jobId=1332878&type=search&JobReqLang=1&recordstart=1&JobSiteId=5341&JobSiteInfo=1332878_5341&Partnerid=25240&Siteid=5341&al=0#jobDetails=1332878_5341

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