Each year, the Center for Social Justice selects second-year students to serve as
CSJ Scholars. Selected students include Fatima M. Abughannam ’24, Shaindy Black ‘25,
Eric Gallant ’24, Myron Minn-Thu-Aye ’25, and Jamie Mitrovic ‘24. Learn more about the program and selected students.
Fatima M. Abughannam ’24 is dedicated to advocating for criminal justice reform, particularly
as it relates to indigent defense and wrongful convictions. As a first-generation
American and daughter to Palestinian immigrants, Abughannam recognizes the importance
of enhancing access to justice and promoting fundamental rights for everyone, including
members of underrepresented groups. Read more >>
Shaindy Black ’25 is a first-generation weekend law student jointly pursuing her Master
of Social Work at the University of Pennsylvania. She plans to practice Family Law
using a trauma-responsive approach. Read more >>
Eric Gallant ’24 was led to Seton Hall Law by his commitment to helping others. In
2017, Eric entered Norwich University and earned a commission into the U.S. Army.
In his junior year, he pivoted in his career and decided to take the LSAT. He began
his legal path in 2021 at Seton Hall and will begin active-duty service as a JAG in
the Army upon graduation in 2024. Read more >>
Jamie Mitrovic ‘24 is committed to public interest by way of focusing on compliance
in environmental and energy law matters, while also serving BIPOC and other minority
communities around the tri-state area and beyond. More specifically, her primary plan
in the public service field revolves around the intersectionality of environmental
harms, disproportionate access to public services or environmental goods, and its
subsequent public health effects; all of which disproportionately affect BIPOC and
minority groups. Read more >>
Myron Minn-Thu-Aye ’25 grew up in Hong Kong. He majored in mathematics and computer
science at Williams College and completed his doctorate in mathematics at Louisiana
State University. He is a weekend student at Seton Hall Law and an Associate Professor
in Residence at the University of Connecticut, where he focuses on promoting accessibility
and active learning in mathematics. Read more >>
Each year, the Center for Social Justice selects students from those who have completed
their first year of law school to serve as CSJ Scholars. Selected students include
Sam Jerabek ’23 and Florencia Marino ’24. Learn more about the program and selected students.
Willingness to work determinedly for those in need. Perseverance in the face of challenge.
These are the characteristics that define a Seton Hall Law School Center for Social
Justice (CSJ) Scholar. In the Fall semester of each year, the CSJ selects students
from those who have completed their first year of law school to serve as CSJ Scholars.
Selected students include Mia Dohrmann '22, Hannah Eaves '22, Matthew Handley '22
and Prubjot Kaur '22. Learn more about the program and selected students.
Mia Dohrmann ’22 was led to Seton Hall Law by the drive to serve communities and further
the cause of social justice. In 2012, she entered college in Baltimore with a goal
to become a doctor serving patients in disadvantaged communities. When she deviated
from the pre-medical path, she knew that she needed to utilize her passion for serving
others in a different way. After her graduation in 2016, she embarked on a 70-day
team bike ride from Baltimore to Seattle with the 4K for Cancer. During her journey,
her team met countless individuals affected by cancer who were still determined to
find a cure and help others facing tough diagnoses. Read more >>
Hannah Eaves ’22 came to Seton Hall Law to learn how to become an advocate for marginalized
members of our society. Eaves has focused her advocacy on the intersectionality between
socioeconomic status, health, race, and the law. “The social determinants of health
affect individuals’ access to economic resources, their statistical likelihood of
incarceration, and even their access to the franchise. We must understand all these
variables to develop the effective tools for changes,” said Eaves. She is concentrating
in Health Law, with the hopes of pursuing a career dedicated to ensuring health equity
for those with who have historically been underserved by the system and advocating
for anti-racist health policy. Read more >>
Prubjot Kaur ’22 is a first-generation law student who aspires to defend those disenfranchised
by the current legal system. “Minorities in the United States constantly undergo daily
interactions which exhibit the profound racism prevalent in our society. Racist experiences
have empowered me to vocally oppose bigotry of all forms and be committed to dismantling
systems of oppression to promote access to justice,” said Kaur. Read more >>
The intersection between the law and its real-world impact on families is what brought
Kerdesha Desir ’21 to Seton Hall Law School. Growing up in the Haitian and greater
Caribbean community, Desir witnessed that domestic violence was often mischaracterized
as simple “familial strife,” swept under a rug and never publicly discussed. “In our
culture, no matter how blatantly obvious the hardship of someone’s situation may be,
we are taught early on to address the issues within the family and not to get ‘outsiders’
involved,” said Desir.
Sebastian Hernandez ’21 is a Colombian immigrant. He moved to the United States when
he was seven years old. “My first step on American soil was at Newark Airport. That’s
where my story in America began. However, my dad found a job in South Carolina, so
we settled in Beaufort County,” said Hernandez. Now he is back in Newark, NJ, motivated
to become an immigration attorney.
After a nine-year career on active duty in the U.S. Army, Matthew Handley ’22 came
to Seton Hall Law School to learn how to make a deeper impact in his community and
to develop skills that would allow him to fight for social justice and systemic change,
particularly on behalf of his fellow veterans. “One of the ‘Core Values’ that you
are taught on your very first day in the Army is ‘Selfless Service.’ This was nothing
new to me, since I was taught the same thing by my parents growing up: that when you
see someone in need, you do whatever you can to help them.”
Social Justice has been a motivating factor for most major life decisions for Tatiana
Laing ’20 since she moved to Washington D.C. for college in 2012. “Being an African
American woman in the most politically active city in the country at a time that included
the death of Trayvon Martin, Tamir Rice, Michael Brown, Freddy Gray and more, made
it nearly impossible for me not to become active in the Black Lives Matter Movement,”
said Laing. As a student activist, she helped create a racial justice organization
on her campus and together with her peers, lead the students in demonstrations, protests,
and teach-ins. Read More >>
Passions for service and social justice are what have brought Angelica Mercado ’21
to Seton Hall Law to pursue a career in service to her community. Coming from a family
of public servants and being a native of Newark, Mercado has been actively engaged
in the community since childhood through community service and volunteering. Read More >>
Hafsa Mansoor ‘20 came to law school to learn how to use the law to dismantle structural
violence, empower the silenced, and restore dignity to the marginalized. In particular,
Hafsa Mansoor is passionate about rectifying institutional inequities impacting women
of color. Read More >>
Commitment to social change. Focus on providing legal services to those in need. Perseverance
in the face of great odds. These are the characteristics that define a Center for
Social Justice (CSJ) Scholar. Journalism helped lead Vanessa Pinto ’19 to her path
as a CSJ Scholar. Pinto attended Rutgers University and double majored in Political
Science and Journalism and Media Studies where she was involved with the Puerto Rican
Action Board and she tutored English for New Brunswick’s elementary school students.
Read More >>
Commitment to social change. Focus on providing legal services to those in need. Perseverance
in the face of great odds. These are the characteristics that define a Center for
Social Justice (CSJ) Scholar. Arrianna Diamantis ’19 has long been interested in the
criminal justice system. She grew up with one immigrant parent in a family that struggled
with finances. This exposed Diamantis to challenges that built in her a deep commitment
to helping the indigent, incarcerated youth, and those struggling to get by, and this
ultimately led her to pursue a career in law. Read More >>
Commitment to social change. Focus on providing legal services to those in need.
Perseverance in the face of great odds. These are the characteristics that define
a Center for Social Justice (CSJ) Scholar. Omar Debs ‘19, a CSJ Scholar, comes from
an immigrant family that struggled for many years to build a life in the United States.
His family was impacted by issues such as immigration/deportation, poverty, and housing.
Read More >>
The Center for Social Justice (CSJ) selects Scholars each year who seeks careers in
public interest, offering them an opportunity to collaborate with faculty in pursuit
of their interests and aspirations. Iman Saad '17, the 2015-16 CSJ Scholar, has a
passion for international human rights and immigration. Saad: “Based on my family’s
background, living in Lebanon and moving to the United States...I am committed to
helping immigrants in the United States as well as refugees throughout the world.”
Full story >>
Sergio Suarez '16 (pictured, left) and Christopher Cochran '16 (pictured, right),
are this year's CSJ Scholars, selected for their dedication to public interest law.
Suarez, a native of Newark, said, "It is hard to put into words the incredible pride
I feel in attending law school in my hometown. I’m in a unique position to help those
in my community.” Read more >>
Antoinette Solomon '16 (pictured, left) and Sofia Iqbal '16 (pictured, right) were named the 2013-14 Center for Social Justice Scholars. They will focus on urban
revitalization and international/human rights issues and cases within in the Center's
clinic settings. Read more.