Clinics | Field Placements | GBISA | JELL | LAW | NALSA | SALDF | Moot Court Board
Oregon Law's Environmental and Natural Resources Law (ENR) Center provides practical experience to educate, equip, and empower the next generation of environmental lawyers and leaders.
Clinics and Field Placements
Environmental Law Clinic
Supervised by attorneys with the Western Environmental Law Center, Oregon Law's Environmental Law Clinic is a mainstay of the university's nationally ranked ENR Center. At its establishment in 1978, the Clinic was the first of its kind in the United States. It saw early successes with instructing pre-career students, prosecuting environmental cases, and protecting a then-mysterious bird: the northern spotted owl. Today, the Clinic continues to equip students for focused advocacy, allowing them to practice environmental law "with a safety net."
ENR Field Placement Program
ENR's Field Placement Program pairs law students with federal, state, and local government offices, Tribal Nations, and nonprofit organizations across disciplines. Students in the Field Placement Program have worked on a diversity of environmental challenges through a variety of practice areas:
- Property Law
- Energy Law and Policy
- International Environmental Law
- Tribal Environmental and Natural Resources Law
- Federal Indian Law
- Ocean and Coastal Law and Policy
- Freshwater Resource Management and Policy
- Land Use and Law and Policy
- Climate Change Law and Policy
Recent ENR field placements include:
- 1,000 Friends of Oregon
- Advocates for the West
- Beyond Toxics
- Blue River Law
- California Department of Justice, Office of the Attorney General
- Cascadia Wildlands
- Center for Ocean Solutions
- Colorado Department of Law, Office of the Attorney General
- Crag Law Center
- Delaware Riverkeeper Network
- Delegation of the European Union to the United States, Trade and Agriculture Section
- Earth Island Institute
- Earthjustice
- Environmental Defense Center
- Environmental Law Alliance Worldwide
- Environmental Protection Information Center
- Greater Hells Canyon Council
- Hudson Riverkeeper
- Humane World for Animals
- Idaho Water Users Association
- Institute of Man and Environment of the Amazon
- Iowa Natural Heritage Foundation
- Klamath-Siskiyou Wildlands Center
- LandWatch Lane County
- Lincoln County Legal Counsel
- Midwest Environmental Advocates
- National Law Center for the Inter-American Free Trade
- National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
- Oregon Citizens Utility Board
- Oregon Department of Environmental Quality
- Oregon Department of Justice, Office of the Attorney General
- Oregon Office of the Legislative Counsel
- Oregon Public Utility Commission
- Oregon Water Resources Department
- Our Children's Trust
- Sierra Club
- Socially Responsible Agriculture Project
- Squaxin Island Tribe
- Trout Unlimited
- Trustees for Alaska
- Tualatin Riverkeepers
- United Nations Climate Change Secretariat, Legal Affairs Division
- U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
- U.S. Department of the Interior, Office of the Solicitor
- U.S. Department of the Interior, Pacific Northwest Region
- U.S. Department of Justice, Environmental and Natural Resources Division
- U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
- Western Resource Advocates
- WildEarth Guardians
- Wildlands Network
- Yurok Tribe
To propose a new ENR field placement, contact Heather Brinton at hbrinton@uoregon.edu or (541) 346-3741.
Student Organizations
Green Business Initiative Student Association
The Green Business Initiative Student Association (GBISA) at the University of Oregon uniquely bridges two diverse but connected university programs: Law and Business. Organized at the intersection of law, business, and the environment, GBISA members are students from the University of Oregon School of Law and/or Lundquist College of Business. The organization's mission is to promote awareness of sustainable business practices and the legal framework and policies that support green business.
Journal of Environmental Law and Litigation
The Journal of Environmental Law and Litigation (JELL) has provided an international forum for new ideas and theories in environmental and natural resources law since 1985. JELL publishes cutting-edge and groundbreaking scholarship on contemporary topics including renewable energy, environmental justice, and international environmental law.
Land Air Water
Land Air Water (LAW) is the oldest and largest student environmental law society in the nation. LAW's first and foremost activity is organizing the annual Public Interest Environmental Law Conference (PIELC) at Oregon Law. Like Land Air Water, PIELC is the first and largest of its kind, not only in the United States but in the world. Each year, the Conference brings activists, attorneys, students, scientists, policymakers, and concerned citizens together to collaborate on environmental solutions.
Native American Law Students Association
The Native American Law Students Association (NALSA) seeks to support law students who are interested in the study of Federal Indian Law, Tribal Law, and traditional forms of governance. NALSA provides opportunities for students, alumni, scholars, attorneys, and experts to build community, learn, and engage around shared interests in legal and policy issues and developments affecting Indigenous communities. The ENR Center and NALSA frequently collaborate on programming focused on Indigenous environmental sovereignty.
Student Animal Legal Defense Fund
The Student Animal Legal Defense Fund (SALDF) shares the Animal Legal Defense Fund's mission of using the law to protect the lives and advance the interests of animals. SALDF strives toward this mission by engaging law students in animal advocacy, spreading awareness of emerging topics in animal law, and fostering stronger connections with more-than-human relations.
Moot Court Board
Oregon Law's Moot Court Board is a long-standing and prestigious 20-member student organization comprised of 10 third-year law students and 10 second-year law students. The Board organizes and runs the law school's oral advocacy program. Annually in mid-spring, the selection process begins for Moot Court Board members. Each member of the Board serves for a two-year period, earning one course credit per semester.
The Board strives to:
- provide students with academically challenging and diverse opportunities to develop oral and written advocacy skills which are essential components of the practice of law
- provide the Oregon Law with a viable competitive moot court program that will enhance the school’s professional development of its students and produce competent and professional student representation in competitions with other law schools
- provide the practicing bar with an opportunity to help shape the skills development of future attorneys
- provide Board members with an opportunity to develop legal research and writing skills through problem development and competition coordination
Oregon Law participates in several intraschool competitions each year, including the National Environmental Law Moot Court Competition.