Author gteitelbaum

Urvashi Vaid

HiRes3B2_3554_bookcoverUrvashi Vaid is the Director of Center for Gender & Sexuality Law at the Columbia Law School.  Vaid is a long time organizer and leader in the LGBT and progressive movements who has served as executive director of the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force and a staff attorney at the ACLU’s National Prison Project.  She worked for ten years in global philanthropy serving as executive director of the Arcus Foundation and deputy director of the Ford Foundation’s Governance and Civil Society Unit, and   is a current Board member of the Gill Foundation. Vaid is the author of Irresistible Revolution:  Confronting Race, Class and the Assumptions of LGBT Politics and Virtual Equality: The Mainstreaming of Gay and Lesbian Liberation.  She is co-editor with John D’Emilio and William Turner of an anthology of histories of key LGBT policy wins titled Creating Change: Public Policy, Sexuality and Civil Rights.

Professor Vaid is the author of “Now You Get What You Want, Do You Want More?”.

Natasha J. Rivera-Silber

social change pic (1)Natasha J. Rivera-Silber is a third-year student at N.Y.U. Law School. Prior to law school, she attended Yale College where she studied History and Ethnicity, Race & Migration.  She then received an M.A. in U.S. History at Yale University, where served as a Teaching Fellow in Gay & Lesbian History and U.S. International History. In law school, she has been an Articles Editor for the N.Y.U. Law Review, an AnBryce Scholar, and a board member of the Latin American Law Students Association.  She also served as a student representative for the N.Y.U. Immigrant Rights Clinic. Through the clinic, she co-authored two amicus briefs for the Supreme Court: one in Vartelas v. Holder, which was cited by the Court, and the other in Arizona v. United States.  Next year, she will join the law firm Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz. In 2014, she will clerk for the Honorable Ann Claire Williams, United States Court of Appeals Judge for the Seventh Circuit.

Natasha J. Rivera-Silber is the author of “Coming Out Undocumented” in the Age of Perry.

Sara Maeder

rlsc photoSara Maeder is a second-year law student at NYU, where she is a Root-Tilden-Kern Scholar.  Prior to law school, she worked as a paralegal, first at Lambda Legal and then at Children’s Rights.  Sara worked as a legal intern at the Sylvia Rivera Law Project last summer, and will spend this coming summer at The Defender Association in Seattle, WA.  She currently serves as a political action chair of OUTLaw at NYU, and as a staff editor for the Review of Law and Social Change.

Sara Maeder is the author of Divorcing Marriage from its Incidents: Framing Perry as a Celebration of Family Self-Determination.

Brian Chelcun

Brian ChelcunBrian Chelcun is a third year law student at NYU Law, pursuing interests in LGBT rights and protecting civil liberties in a post-9/11 national security world.  He is more optimistic about the former than the latter.  Brian spent a summer at Lambda Legal and a semester at Sylvia Rivera Law Project through the NYU Law LGBT clinic, and interned as an Arthur Garfield Hays Civil Liberties Fellow at the ACLU’s National Security Project and Legal Aid Society’s LGBT Law and Policy Initiative.  After graduation, Brian will clerk for federal judges in New York City and pursue a career in direct legal services.  Prior to law school, Brian served as a Peace Corps Volunteer doing HIV prevention and education in Tanzania, and worked as a foreign policy legislative aide to former U.S. Senator Russ Feingold.

Brian Chelcun is the author of Perry‘s Path to Equality: Rejecting “Gay Marriage” and Rethinking the “Right to Marry”.

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