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71 Clev. St. L. Rev. 571 (2022-2023)
Beyond Response: Reimagining the Legal Academy's Role in Disaster Recovery and Preparedness

handle is hein.journals/clevslr71 and id is 583 raw text is: 










BEYOND RESPONSE: REIMAGINING THE LEGAL
ACADEMY'S ROLE IN DISASTER RECOVERY AND
                           PREPAREDNESS

                             LATISHA  NIXON-JONES*

                                    ABSTRACT

   This Article proposes expanding the legal academy's role in responding to disasters
and emergencies, specifically through creating disaster clinics that take a community-
based lawyering  approach. The  Article is one of the first to identify the need for
community-based   disaster legal clinical education that goes beyond the immediate
response phase. It also proposes creating a disaster legal pipeline from the clinic
through post-graduation employment.  The Article furthers the literature's discussion
of the need for sustained disaster legal education. As the global pandemic caused by
COVID-19   coronavirus continues to impact vulnerable populations and the frequency
of natural disasters continues to increase, this Article provides a blueprint to law
school faculty and administrators on the process of starting a new clinic or redesigning
an existing clinic into a long-term disaster-related clinic. Additionally, the Article
provides a  timeline of disaster legislation that has evolved to provide a robust
background  for seminar courses. The  Article draws from the author's expertise in
creating two disaster clinics and multiple disaster and environmental justice courses.



  * Latisha Nixon-Jones, an Assistant Professor of Law, and I am honored to present this
Article, which would not have been possible without the support and contributions of so many
individuals and organizations. I initially presented this work-in-progress during the
Southeastern Association of Law School conference in the summer of 2021, where I received
valuable feedback. Professor Kenneth Klein provided invaluable feedback on my abstract. I am
also grateful to Professors Suzanne Rowe and Adele Amos at the University of Oregon, who
generously assisted with editing, polishing, and providing general support. Furthermore, I
would like to express my sincere gratitude to Chancellor John Pierre and the clinical faculty at
Southern University Law Center for affording me the opportunity to create this vital clinic. The
ongoing support from Equal Justice Works and Americorps for disaster research and practice is
also greatly appreciated. To the editorial board at Cleveland State Law Review, thank you for
all of you feedback and consistency, your hard work truly made this Article better. Lastly, I
would like to thank my family and village for their unwavering support. To my husband,
Christopher Jones, and my children, Jordyn, Sidney, and Christopher Jr., I am grateful for your
love and understanding. To my grandmothers, Iceola, Charlene, and Cathy, who helped watch
my children so I could complete this Article, your sacrifice has helped shape the scholar I am
and will become.


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