Emily B. Goldberg is a Visiting
Associate Clinical Professor in the
Civil Litigation Clinic. She received
her B.A., summa cum laude, in American
Studies and a Certificate in Peace and
Justice Studies from Tufts University,
and her J.D. cum laude from New York
University School of Law, where she
served as a Staff Editor of the Review
of Law and Social Change. During law
school, Ms. Goldberg worked on
prisoners’ rights litigation as a member
of the NYU School of Law Civil Rights
Clinic, and on voting rights issue as an
intern in the Voting Section of the
United States Department of Justice,
Civil Rights Division. Her legal work in
the area of voting rights represented a
continuation of her prior academic work,
which included an undergraduate Thesis
presenting an historical, political, and
legal analysis of majority-minority
congressional districts, for which she
received Highest Thesis Honors and the
Ted Shapiro Prize for Outstanding Honors
Thesis.
After graduating from law school, Ms.
Goldberg was a NAPIL (now Equal Justice
Works) Fellow, first with the National
Women’s Law Center in Washington D.C.
and then with the Washington Lawyers’
Committee for Civil Rights & Urban
Affairs. Her fellowship focused on
gender discrimination in the areas of
education and employment, and she
represented clients in cases brought
under Title IX, Title VII, and the
Family Medical Leave Act. After
completing her fellowship, Ms. Goldberg
continued to work with the Washington
Lawyers’ Committee, practicing in the
areas of employment and housing
discrimination. Thereafter, Ms. Goldberg
returned to New York City to serve as a
law clerk for the Honorable Lawrence M.
McKenna, United States District Court,
Southern District of New York.
Thereafter, Ms. Goldberg joined the law
firm of Gibbons P.C. as an
Associate/Gibbons Fellow in Public
Interest and Constitutional Law where
she practiced in the areas of civil
rights, immigrants’ rights, prisoners’
rights, and death penalty. |