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Ethics & Leadership in Law Politics & Government

July 26, 2023, Filed Under: Internship

The Barbara Harlow Internship in Human Rights & Social Justice: Fall 2023

The deadline to apply for Fall 2023 Barbara Harlow internships is Tuesday, August 8, 2023. Please note: This internship is only open to BDP students. If you are not a BDP student, please consider our standard undergraduate internship.

The Barbara Harlow Internship in Human Rights & Social Justice honors the life and work of Barbara Harlow (1948-2017), who was the Louann and Larry Temple Centennial Professor of English Literature at the University of Texas. She was a committed colleague, friend, and mentor to countless students, activists, and intellectuals. As a collaboration between the Rapoport Center and the Bridging Disciplines Programs (BDP), the internship aims to introduce BDP students to Harlow’s scholarship and activism, and to encourage them to imagine future trajectories for her work.

The internship is made possible by seed money that Harlow gifted to the Rapoport Center and the BDP. Though the internship is similar to the Rapoport Center’s standard undergraduate internship, it offers a higher stipend ($1,750 for Fall 2023) and requires three additional components:

  • In the cover letter, students should reflect (in one paragraph) on how Harlow’s scholarship and activism might influence their work with the Rapoport Center and their pursuit of human rights and social justice more broadly.
  • During the internship, each recipient will write a piece for our Human Rights Commentary page, which either engages directly with Harlow’s work or uses her work as a lens through which to engage critically with a topic.
  • After the internship, each recipient will create a poster to reflect on the internship, taking into account Harlow’s impact on their experience, and present it at the Annual BDP poster session in April. (Fall and Summer interns will submit at the end of their respective term, and then present in April.)

Selected interns should be available at least 10 hours per week during the semester, and 20 hours per week during the summer. Depending on funding, between one and three internships will be offered per year. Students who are not selected for the Barbara Harlow Internship may be considered for our standard undergraduate internship.

Application:

Rapoport Center undergraduate interns bring energy, engagement, and expanded capacities to the Center’s programming. They will support various initiatives depending on their backgrounds, interests, and the needs of the Center. For Fall 2023, we are particularly interested in interns who have expertise or interest in the Center’s thematic priorities: environmental justice and climate justice, inequality, reproductive justice, among other focal points.

Intern projects may include the following:

  • Maintain websites for the Rapoport Center’s projects and initiatives
  • Expand the Center’s social media and general communications outreach
  • Serve as liaison to UT undergraduate community and help develop the Center’s undergraduate outreach
  • Engage in human rights research and writing, with a focus on the Center’s ongoing historical and archival research
  • Assisting Center staff and other student team members with other projects and tasks as assigned

Eligibility: This internship is only open to BDP students. If you are not a BDP student, please consider our standard undergraduate internship. Please note that this internship is open to UT students of all citizenship statuses.

Required Qualifications:

  • Commitment to working on issues of human rights and justice
  • Excellent writing and editing ability
  • Individual initiative and flexibility
  • Strong organizational and time management skills
  • Professional demeanor

The following qualifications may be preferred in some candidates:

Priority:

  • Community engagement and/or outreach experience at UT, or in a comparable academic or nonprofit setting
  • Experience designing public-facing communications, including social media, event publicity, newsletters, blogs, etc.
  • Experience developing websites (especially using WordPress platform) and/or curating digital content
  • Proficiency in Spanish and/or Portuguese
  • Experience with scholarly research, editing, writing, and/or archival work
  • Demonstrated interest in issues such as reproductive justice and environmental/climate justice
  • Demonstrated interest in themes such as care work, essential work, automation, and the global dimensions of worker precarity

Fall interns should be available to work 10 hours a week during the semester. This is a paid opportunity ($1,750 for the Fall 2023 semester).

Qualified students should submit the following items in a single PDF file through our online form. Please make sure the file name includes your full name.

  • Cover letter: state why you are interested in the position; demonstrate basic knowledge of Rapoport Center programs and activities. Be sure to address your specific skills and qualifications.
  • Resume/CV: be sure to indicate any relevant skills or proficiency in languages other than English.
  • Transcript: we will accept both unofficial and official transcripts.
  • Writing sample (3-5 pages): it does not need to relate directly to human rights, though that is preferable.

Deadline

August 8, 2023

Contact

Contact Rapoport Center program coordinator Caroline Hahn at carolinehahn@austin.utexas.edu if you have any questions.

March 8, 2023, Filed Under: Internship

PSU Intern for United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees – Summer 2023

About UNHCR :

UNHCR’s Protection and Solutions Unit (PSU) serves asylum seekers, refugees, and stateless persons in
the territory of the United States (U.S.), promoting protection in law and policy, as well as engaging in the U.S. resettlement policy and local integration issues. The PSU’s resettlement staff also supports UNHCR’s Caribbean Unit by managing refugee resettlement operations out of the Caribbean states and territories. The PSU informs government officials, attorneys, and NGOs about international standards of refugee protection and protection for stateless persons. Staff regularly meets with partners to discuss U.S.-specific issues related to refugee protection and statelessness provides comments on proposed legislation and regulations, submits amicus briefs on select legal issues, engages with the U.S. government to provide technical assistance or advice to promote consistency between U.S. policy and international standards, and conducts training and public presentations to a range of audiences. Throughout all these endeavors, UNHCR maintains close communication with government partners in a range of U.S. agencies to ensure that our cooperative relationship is maintained.

Organizational Unit: Protection and Solutions Unit, UNHCR Multi-Country Office Washington
Duty Station: Washington, D.C.
Position Title/Type: PSU Intern (Individual Case Team-Detention Hotline or Resettlement)
Duration of the Internship: Between 12 weeks and 6 months
Expected Start Date: 1 May 2023 (flexible)
Application Period: 2 March to 2 April 2023
Application Link: https://unhcr.wd3.myworkdayjobs.com/en-US/External/details/PSU-Intern_JR2313719

Duties and Responsibilities:
• Answer and respond to individual queries from asylum seekers, refugees, stateless people, and
other persons of concern to UNHCR, primarily through the Detention Hotline, but also through
email, letter and voicemail communication;
• Conduct interviews in Spanish with refugees to obtain basic protection information;
• Conduct Country of Origin and other research to support individual asylum cases;
• Conduct policy research on domestic and regional asylum and stateless procedures;
• Provide counseling on individual resettlement queries from congressional offices, NGOs and
resettlement agencies through writing to UNHCR country offices;
• Observe and report on relevant meetings and conferences with government agencies and various
NGOs working in the field;

• Open and maintain individual case files in UNHCR’s case management data;
• Conduct other projects as needed to further assist persons of concern to UNHCR.

Minimum Qualifications Required:
• Bachelor’s degree, Master’s degree, or J.D. degree, either obtained or in-process (assignments
may vary depending on intern’s background).
• Strong interest in the rights of refugees, asylum seekers, displaced persons, other protected
individuals. stateless individuals, international relations, human rights, or humanitarian response.
• General technological proficiency a plus.
• Ability to multi-task and prioritize with minimal supervision. Attention to detail required.
• English language (fluency required); Fluency in Spanish (preferred for IC team, required for
resettlement team); Fluency in French (preferred for the resettlement team). Additional language
skills highly desirable.

Terms of Internship:
• Candidates may apply for both the Individual Case Team or the Resettlement Team internship
position. In their application, candidates can indicate if they have a preference for working with the
Individual Case Team or the Resettlement Team. If no preference is indicated, the candidate will
be considered for both teams. Candidates will be selected to work with only one team.
• UNHCR offers full-time and part-time internships. Interns are responsible for their housing, their
legal stay in the United States, health insurance, and any other related documentation.
• The hiring office will provide interns who do not receive financial support from a third party (e.g.,
the university or government grant) a Food and Local Transportation Allowance (FLTA), calculated
in USD and normally payable in local currency via bank transfer.
• The monthly amount of the Allowance is 70% of the monthly salary of the GS level 3 step 1 for the
Washington, D.C. duty station (which is equal to $2,196 per month for a full-time internship). The
Allowance for part-time internship is prorated. Please also note that the FLTA is not considered as
source of income, and UNHCR will not provide any tax-related documents such as W-2 forms.
• An internship does not create any expectation or entitlement to employment with UNHCR at the
conclusion of the internship.

How to Apply
• To be considered for any one of these positions, candidates must complete their application
through the UNHCR jobs portal.
• All vacancies are posted to UNHCR’s careers portal
(https://unhcr.wd3.myworkdayjobs.com/External). Filter by location country and select “United
States.” Select the internship job announcement, and then click “Apply” to complete your
application. If you have never submitted an application via our new career portal, you will be
requested to register as a new user and create an account. Applications will not be accepted by
email. Only shortlisted candidates will be contacted.
• UNHCR encourages applications from all qualified candidates without distinction on the grounds of
race, color, sex, national origin, age, religion, disability, sexual orientation, and gender identity. The
agency values diversity, inclusiveness, and gender equity and strives to achieve full adherence to
these principles in its policies and organizational culture. For more information on UNHCR’s
commitment to diversity and inclusion, please see the page at this link.
• For more information on UNHCR’s work, please visit our website.

November 15, 2022, Filed Under: Internship

Internship with the Children’s Defense Fund Texas – Spring 2023

Overview

For years, we at CDF-Texas have been honored to welcome dozens of talented college and graduate-level students to our internship program. Along with CDF-Texas staff, our interns ensure Texas children have the resources, support, and institutions to become our state’s next generation of advocates and leaders.

We are proud to house an intentional and structured internship program where students get firsthand experience with

  • professional advocacy,
  • affecting policy change,
  • working with young people,
  • and more.

In addition to this experience, our program connects interns to one of the most powerful networks in the nonprofit world.

Interns are vital to CDF-Texas’s work, and we are pleased to play a role in supporting the next generation of advocates.


Spring 2023 Internships 

Health Care Policy Intern (graduate students preferred)

Communications Intern


Internship and Application Details

Internship Details:

  • Timeframe: Spring 2023 term
  • Time Commitment: 15 to 20 hours/week
  • Compensation: $15/hour for up to 20 hours/week
  • Deadline: Applications will be accepted and reviewed on a rolling basis, with a final deadline of December 5th at 11:59pm

This internship will be remote with the possibility of hybrid work.

Application Components:

  • Application Form
  • Resume
  • Cover Letter

Finalists will be asked to interview and submit a professional writing sample.

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Please note that all opportunities are subject to approval or denial through the BDP Connecting Experience proposal process. If you have questions about whether or not an internship is a good fit for your BDP certificate, please contact your BDP advisor.

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