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Paula
Schwartzbauer has been practicing immigration law since she graduated
from the University of Minnesota Law School in 1996. After law
school, Ms. Schwartzbauer worked at Julie M. Zimmer & Associates
until 1999, when she was recruited by Centro Legal, Inc. – a non-profit
law office serving low-income Latinos – to supervise its immigration
unit.
In 2002, Paula was asked by Hamline University
School of Law to create and teach an immigration law clinic as an
adjunct professor. Paula practiced immigration law at the Legal
Aid Society of Minneapolis (Mid-Minnesota Legal Aid), another non-profit
law office serving low-income people, from 2007 until 2013. She
also continued her work as adjunct professor at Hamline University
School of Law by co-teaching its immigration law clinic. In March
2013, Ms. Schwartzbauer opened up her own private law office, Paula
Schwartzbauer Law, LLC.
In 1995, Ms. Schwartzbauer interned with the
United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights and interviewed Iraqis
to determine if they met the requirements for international refugee
protection. Paula has taught many continuing legal education
courses on immigration law and has served as a mentor for volunteer
attorneys taking asylum cases through The Advocates for Human
Rights. She has also volunteered with The Advocates for Human
Rights to give presentations to the general public on refugees and
immigrants.
Paula is fluent in Spanish and speaks some
Farsi. She holds U.S. and Iranian citizenship. Ms.
Schwartzbauer is a member of the American Immigration Lawyers
Association (AILA) and previously served on AILA’s liaison committee
with the local office of the Immigration and Naturalization Service (now
Citizenship and Immigration Services).
Paula also has an interest in international
human rights law. In 1994, Ms. Schwartzbauer interned with the
Committee on the Administration of Justice (CAJ), a human rights
non-governmental organization located in Belfast, Northern Ireland, and
helped prepare and present a submission to the United Nations Committee
on the Rights of the Child in Geneva. Ms. Schwartzbauer also
served as CAJ’s Researcher on Policing from 2003 until 2004. Paula
has participated in two human rights missions with The Advocates for
Human Rights. The first was to observe the Peruvian Truth and
Reconciliation Process and the second was to Ghana, where she
interviewed Liberian refugees on behalf of the Liberian Truth and
Reconciliation Commission. Paula was an annual guest lecturer in
the international human rights law course taught at the University of
Minnesota Law School from 1996 until 2002 and worked at the University
of Minnesota Human Rights Center from 1993 until 1996. |
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