Welcome to The Public Interest

and Human Rights Law Clinic

at the Catholic University of Salta

Meet our Human Rights Ambassador & Founder of the Clinic!

Veronica Musa is a human rights lawyer from Argentina with vast international experience. In 2018, she was awarded a Rotary International Global Grant and the Grillo-Marxuach Family Scholarship to further her studies in peace and justice at the University of San Diego’s Joan B. Kroc School of Peace.

As a part of her capstone project, Veronica wrote on the cross-pollination between justice education and peace studies, designing a peace-applied project to establish a human rights and public interest law clinic in her home state of Salta, Argentina.

After the summer of 2020, when pandemic travel restrictions were lifted allowing repatriation of flights to Argentina, Veronica returned home and presented her project to the Catholic University of Salta (UCASAL). After a year of intensive work collaborating with UCASAL’s law school leadership, she is now the Director of its first human rights clinic.

The following blog contribution is from Veronica Musa ‘20 (MA): A passion for Clinical Legal Education

Between 2007 and 2011, I worked for a nonprofit legal firm monitoring the conditions of confinement of immigrants in detention in Florida’s county jails. The experience transformed me profoundly. Not only was I exposed to a collective that defies a tenet of the penal law— the incarceration without the commission of a crime—but I also witnessed the imprisonment of individuals whom did not receive any legal assistance or representation.

In this context, what began as a typical human rights monitoring and reporting activity developed into increased efforts to finding pro bono representation and legal relief for the detainees. This is where I learned, firsthand, the work being done by law school clinics in the United States. Clinical professors and their students proved valuable allies in fighting for justice. I remember thinking, “what a powerful experience to have at school, to learn by challenging a system and making efforts to change it.” Since then, I have become passionate about clinical legal education (CLE)—a pedagogy of practice rooted in the understanding that the law could be a tool for social transformation.

CLE is not widely present in Argentinian law schools. Traditionally, our legal education is formalistic and oriented towards protecting and reproducing the status quo. In the United States, driving up and down the I-95 Route to visit county jails, I began thinking about implementing CLE in our law schools in Argentina. Most especially in law schools that serve the country’s northwestern region where I grew up. What once began as nothing more than a dream, transformed into a possibility as I began reading on the subject extensively and connecting with individuals and places from which I could learn more.

Learn more about Veronica!

The Project

The intervention hopes to ameliorate the access to justice deficit in Salta by undertaking strategic litigation and human rights advocacy. Simultaneously, this work will shape a new generation of lawyers—innovative, multi-skilled, transnational, socially and environmentally conscious—that will tackle the challenges that the northwestern region of Argentina faces and participate in the design of its solutions.

1

The Law Comes First

Fulfill a gap in legal aid providers serving vulnerable people in the region, taking on cases that have the potential to impact many people or modify public policy, and.

2

Pro Bono Culture

Educate future law practitioners and lawyers at early stages of their profession, providing them with technical expertise on public interest law while instilling a commitment to public service law and helping to develop sensitivity to social justice issues that will enlarge the local pro bono culture.

3

Theory of Change

The underlying theory of change of the proposed peace-applied intervention is the following:  

If legal services are provided through the PIHR Law Clinic, underserved populations will have access to justice and trainees will develop social consciousness.

The Region

The northwest part of Argentina, composed of the provinces of Catamarca, Jujuy, Tucumán, Santiago del Estero, La Rioja, and Salta, is structurally underdeveloped. The region was excluded from Argentina’s modernization process, which began on the Atlantic coast in the 19th century. The Kolla, Guaraní, and Wichí peoples, among others, who originally inhabited the area were decimated and displaced towards the most inhospitable places of the northern border, constituting to date a population in a vulnerable situation.

The region presents levels of unemployment, poverty, maternal and infant mortality, and violence against women higher than the country’s average. A study carried out by the University of Buenos Aires assessed the population’s legal needs and found that Salta has the most significant national deficit in access to justice. This deficit severely impacts the most vulnerable groups, disproportionately affects indigenous communities, and has devastating consequences for the environment. Obstacles to obtaining justice reinforce poverty and exclusion. 

There is an extensive border of more than 700 km long between Argentina and Bolivia in our region. Social, cultural, and commercial exchanges within the area date back to pre-Columbian times. However, today, border communities face prejudices and challenges that generate injustice and promote violence on both sides of the border. 

The region also presents conflict situations related to the access and use of natural, renewable and non-renewable resources to which current institutional structures have proved ineffective to attend.

Project selected by the Fulbright Specialist Program 2022 of the Argentine Fulbright Commission!

Proud to share that our legal clinic to provide Access to Justice in North-Western Argentina at the Catholic University of Salta will benefit from the in-person visit in June 2022 of a seasonal law professor from the United States.

At the moment, we are selecting the right candidate; we are very grateful to all applicants and honored by their interest in our efforts. This is the first time that our university has won the invaluable and prestigious collaboration of the Fulbright Commission! 

Donate and Get Involved!

Northern Argentina, suffers from high levels of unemployment, poverty, maternal and infant mortality, and violence against women. It also has the most significant national deficit in access to justice.

This deficit severely impacts the most vulnerable groups, disproportionately affects indigenous communities, and has devastating consequences for the environment. Our Human Rights Clinic intends to fulfill this access to justice gap while training socially conscious lawyers.

Here at our school, we are making the human rights clinic a reality and planting the seed of change. We are not short of enthusiasm but need funds to afford the material and human resources that will allow our clinic to run smoothly and consistently.

If you are able, please help us meet our goals. One hundred percent (100%) of the donations received will directly remove the obstacles to justice that reinforce poverty and exclusion in our region.