Graduate Student Courses

Calling all social justice innovators!

Innovation for Justice’s graduate-level classes embed students in active research teams.

All i4J course experiences are:

100% virtual and live.

In our flipped classroom environment, students do class assignments and research on their own time, and come to class ready to engage with the research team to advance research efforts.

Project-based.

All classes are embedded in a real research project that aims to solve real-world problems.

Community-engaged.

All students broadly engage with system actors and community partners as part of the research process.

Advancing equal justice.

All classes apply design thinking and systems thinking methodologies to expose inequalities in the justice system, and design, build and test disruptive solutions to the justice crisis.

i4J teaches four graduate-level courses at the University of Utah and University of Arizona.

Innovating Legal Services, UX4Justice, and Legal Innovation for Policy Advocacy are our entry-level courses, and can be taken in any order. Students who have completed at least one entry-level i4J course may apply for Leadership in Legal Innovation.

i4J also has opportunities for students from any university.

Students from any university and any field of study may apply for an i4J Student Externship.

Learn more about i4J’s courses and other opportunities for engaging with i4J below.

Graduate-level courses at the University of Utah and University of Arizona.

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Innovating Legal Services (3 Credits)

UA: LAW 672A
UU: LAW 7622 | STRAT 6600

More than 2 million people are incarcerated in the United States. The United States Supreme Court in Johnson v. Avery and Bounds v. Smith held that incarcerated individuals have a well-established right to access the courts, which can include helping other incarcerated individuals with their legal issues. In prisons across the US, a network of jailhouse lawyers learn and use the law to protect their rights and the rights of their fellow inmates. However, when these jailhouse lawyers go home, unauthorized practice of law restrictions prohibit them from using their legal knowledge to help their communities.

In Fall 2024, ILS students will work with the Jailhouse Lawyers Initiative, including currently and formerly incarcerated jailhouse lawyers, to understand the legal empowerment potential of jailhouse lawyers to address the civil justice crisis in justice-impacted communities.

Fall 2024 (Tentative): Mon. + Wed.
1:30-3:20 p.m. AZ* / 2:30-4:20 p.m. UT
(*class may start 1 hour later after 11/3)

Past projects produced by this course include:

Innovating Legal Services is the Graduate Student course associated with i4J’s Service Impact Area. For more information about our research in this area, visit Service Impact Area.

UX4Justice (3 Credits)

UA: LAW 697
UU: LAW 7621 | STRAT 6610

98% of low-income domestic violence survivors will experience a civil legal need this year, and 88% of low-income survivors will receive inadequate or no legal help. Securing a protective order is a critical first step for many survivors exiting abuse. Courts across the nation are adopting new online processes for court users without counsel, including online portals for filing protective order petitions.

In Fall 2024, UX4Justice students will conduct community-engaged research to evaluate and iteratively redesign an online portal for e-filing protective orders. Using design thinking, systems thinking, and user experience (UX) research and design methodologies, UX4Justice students will develop UX design recommendations that empower domestic violence survivors to more easily and safely file petitions for protective orders online on their own.

No tech or design experience required!

Fall 2024 (Tentative): Tues. + Thurs.
1:30-3:20 p.m. AZ* / 2:30-4:20 p.m. UT
(*class may start 1 hour later after 11/3)


Projects produced by UX4Justice include:

UX4Justice is the Graduate Student course associated with i4J’s System Impact Area. For more information about our research in this area, visit System Impact Area.

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Legal Innovation for Policy Advocacy (3 Credits)

UA LAW 672
UU LAW 7620 | UU STRAT 6620

Not offered Fall 2024. Check back for future offerings.

Effective systems-level change requires access to - and amplification of - accurate and usable information about social justice problems and their ripple effects. In this course, students work with and within community to co-create tools that aggregate the information advocates need to call for and advance disruptive change in their communities.

Projects produced by this course include:

Legal Innovation for Policy Advocacy is the Graduate Student course associated with i4J’s System Impact Area. For more information about our research in this area, visit Structure Impact Area.

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Leadership in Legal Innovation

UA: LAW 672B
UU: LAW 7623 | STRAT 6850-094

Leadership in Legal Innovation provides an opportunity for students who have completed an entry-level i4J course to advance their legal innovation skills. Leadership students play an active role within i4J as a member of a research team.

Opportunities to enroll in Leadership are shared with students in intro-level i4J courses during registration.

Graduate-level externships for students at any university.

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i4J Student Externships

This is an interdisciplinary, project-based, and community-grounded externship that engages students in innovative practices and pathways for reimagining access and use of legal knowledge in the U.S. This is a fully virtual and potentially credit- and/or work-study-eligible externship opportunity for current graduate students across disciplines.

Graduate students from any university may apply for i4J Student Externships. Click the button below to learn more and apply.

Other opportunities for engagement

There are many ways to get involved with i4J courses.

i4J Paid Fellowships

i4J offers paid research and community engagement opportunities to students interested in supporting ongoing i4J projects both within and outside the classroom. Students interested in paid fellowships can inquire at info@innovation4justice.org.

i4J Alumni Coaches

i4J loves to welcome back past students to serve as alumni coaches in current i4J classes. Coaches co-teach and mentor students through research projects. i4J Alumni interested in coaching should inquire at info@innovation4justice.org.

Subject Matter Experts

i4J works with countless subject matter experts to guest lecture, speak on panels, provide feedback on student work, and more. If you’re interested in contributing to an i4J research project, please inquire at info@innovation4justice.org.