Home / Current Students / Careers / Bernard Koteen Office of Public Interest Advising / Fellowships and Funding / HLS-Specific Fellowship Opportunities
The Irving R. Kaufman Fellowships were created in recognition of Judge Kaufman's distinguished career in public service and are made possible by a generous gift from the late Honorable Walter Annenberg, philanthropist and former Ambassador to the Court of St. James.
The Kaufman Fellowship is intended as an award to graduating Harvard Law School students and recent alumni/ae who demonstrate the potential for outstanding careers in public service. Public interest work is defined broadly by the Selection Committee to encompass all law-related work that serves a distinct public purpose. Examples of qualifying practice settings include poverty law in legal services organizations, public interest nonprofit organizations, public defender or criminal prosecutor associations, international organizations, private public interest law firms and government agencies. Jobs not eligible for support include judicial clerkships, academic appointments, and fellowships in academic clinical settings (with the exception of clinical teaching fellowships where the fellow will actually be practicing public interest law). Students and graduates receiving Heyman Fellowships are not eligible for monetary awards from the Kaufman. Students taking judicial clerkships upon graduation may apply for a Kaufman Fellowship during their clerkships for the following year. The Committee hopes to select a group of Fellows diverse in their career goals, job locations, and personal characteristics (ethnicity, gender, class, age, etc.).
Fellowship Awards
The Kaufman Fellowship is two different grant programs: fully-funded fellowships and supplemental grants to help fund bar study and moving costs. Given market conditions this year, we anticipate that the majority, if not all, of Kaufman funds will go to fully-funded fellowships. Students and judicial clerks may apply to both if necessary. Each grant requires slightly different application materials as outlined below. However, for both you will need the following basic materials:
Up to four fellowships will be awarded $35,000 - $40,000 each (depending on location of the job and other factors). This will provide a one-year salary for a 3L or judicial clerk to work at the organization of his or her choice. The organization will be required to pay benefits, including health care costs. In order to be eligible for this funding, you will need to show that you have come close to exhausting your external sources of jobs/fellowships. You will also need to investigate whether the organization you plan to work for is able to accept outside funding (some organizations, typically governmental, have bars on salaries being paid by outside entities).
For this fellowship, the applicant will need to provide the following in addition to the basic materials listed above:
The Selection Committee will provide $1000 supplemental grants to all selected applicants whose salary for the upcoming year will be less than $60,000. This grant is designed to help students/clerks with bar and moving costs.
For this fellowship, the applicant will need to provide the following in addition to the basic materials listed above:
For successful applicants whose employment plans remain uncertain at the time of the Committee's decisions, an award will be granted on the condition that the job accepted by the candidate matches the type of work and salary indicated in their Fellowship application. An applicant who plans to take a job different from the type of job(s) outlined in the application must discuss the job with Alexa Shabecoff in the Bernard Koteen Office of Public Interest Advising to clear whether it is an eligible position.