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Advocating for Justice Beyond the Courtroom

Steven Chaplar 鈥19, David Secor 鈥19, Claudia Espinoza 鈥19 CLAS and Creighton Ward (a student from Bryn Mawr College)
Steven Chaplar 鈥19, David Secor 鈥19, Claudia Espinoza 鈥19 CLAS and Creighton Ward (a student from Bryn Mawr College)

An attorney鈥檚 work for their clients often goes beyond the courtroom, as David Secor 鈥19 learned during his time with Villanova Law鈥檚 Farmworker Legal Aid Clinic (FLAC). Through his work with FLAC, Secor gained hands-on legal training while representing real clients on critical legal issues.

鈥淲orking with Villanova Law鈥檚 Farmworker Legal Aid Clinic and farmworkers in Pennsylvania has been a formative part of my law school experience,鈥 said David Secor 鈥19, a third-year student. 鈥淚t was amazing to collaborate with other Villanova Law students and work as a team with an incomparable group of interpreters and clinic staff.鈥

FLAC represents agricultural workers seeking redress for issues including wage theft, workers compensation, dangerous working conditions, unemployment and retaliatory discharge, as well as asylum and visa applications. 鈥淰illanova鈥檚 clinical program offers students an amazing opportunity to put what they learn in class into practice, and achieve important results for their clients,鈥 said Secor.

Under the direction of a full-time faculty member, students working in Villanova Law鈥檚 six in-house clinics earn credit while serving as the primary advocates for their clients鈥攊nterviewing, counseling, negotiating agreements, structuring deals, drafting legal documents and appearing in court. Student clinic interns gain invaluable hands-on experience, while at the same time helping underserved members of the community, many of whom would otherwise not receive legal representation.

Prior to coming to Villanova Law, Secor worked for two years with the nonprofit National Rural Health Association in Washington, D.C., advocating for better health services and community health education in rural and underserved areas across the country, including farmworker and migrant communities. It was important to Secor to continue this type of work, and when searching for and applying to law school, Villanova鈥檚 clinical program caught his eye.

As a FLAC student attorney, Secor has learned that a lawyer鈥檚 work often extends to listening to a person鈥檚 story and learning more about their community, to sharing and explaining the relevant aspects of the law, to representing a client in court.

Following graduation, Secor hopes to continue working with and advocating for immigrants and underserved communities. He is currently externing with the National Immigrant Justice Center, an immigrants鈥 rights organization, in Washington, D.C.