性视界传媒

A law clinic that helps students and entrepreneurs? Now that鈥檚 an innovative idea

Body

What does it take to transform a cool idea into a business? Students at 性视界传媒鈥檚聽聽are finding out, by helping real-life entrepreneurs in the school鈥檚 new Innovation Law Clinic.

鈥淚t鈥檚 all about the students,鈥 said professor聽, executive director of the聽, who leads the clinic. 鈥淪tudents take the first cut at talking with clients and take the lead on deliverables, such as forming a corporation, doing contracts or filing a patent application.鈥

Third year law students Kayleen Hansen, Aris Hart, Samantha Levin, and Innovation Law Clinic professor Sean O鈥機onnor discuss intellectual property law and strategic business plans for their client in the fashion industry. The students are seated at a table, while the professor stands and examines a document. Papers and laptops are spread across the table.
Third year law students (left to right) Kayleen Hansen, Aris Hart, Samantha Levin, and Innovation Law Clinic professor Sean O鈥機onnor discuss intellectual property law and strategic business plans for their client in the fashion industry. Photo by: Ron Aira/Creative Services

The first cohort includes third-year students Samantha Levin, Kayleen Hansen and Aris Hart, who have assisted a nonprofit working to get incorporated and gain tax-exempt status, a Mason student developing technology that may be patentable, and a fashion designer navigating the legal intricacies for branding her business.

鈥淥ne reason I decided to go to law school was to take my interests and skills and direct them toward helping people鈥攈ere we can help people be as successful as they can in their endeavors,鈥 Levin said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 been absolutely amazing to take what we鈥檝e learned in classes and learned doctrinally and apply that to real-life practice, real-life clients, and help people in a way that lawyers can.鈥

No two ideas are alike, and the clinic capitalizes on this to advance students鈥 skillsets. As the students provide clients with resources, information and advice, they learn how to tailor the legal work to a client鈥檚 unique project.

鈥淵ou do get a lot more hands-on interaction, and you鈥檙e getting practical experience that you may not otherwise get,鈥 Hansen said. 鈥淚nnovation and entrepreneurship are not necessarily the easiest areas to break into as a law student.鈥

That鈥檚 one of the biggest draws of the course, Hart said.

鈥淛umping into the clinic is a great way to [enter this field of law] because you are able to do it under the supervision of an attorney and really get your feet wet in a way that is great for the client, because they get a free legal services, and it鈥檚 good for students because we get experience,鈥 Hart said.

The clinic is often the first time that students start to grapple with the complexities of working with a real client, O鈥機onnor said.

鈥淚n the clinic we give students a chance to start learning what they don鈥檛 know on the application side of things,鈥 O鈥機onnor said. 鈥淟aw schools used to just teach theory, so students would get into law firms but feel like they had no idea what they鈥檙e doing鈥攖his attempts to close that gap.鈥

As the clinic progresses, O鈥機onnor said he plans for other units across the university to be involved, and have the clinic serve the region鈥檚 innovation ecosystem.

鈥淲e鈥檙e hoping to provide a space for folks who don鈥檛 have the money to hire an attorney to receive support and advice,鈥 he said, adding that entrepreneurs often run ahead and do things that cause legal problems later on. 鈥淲e hope to have a lot more people succeed or fail on the merits of their idea, not because they made some misstep with a legal document.鈥