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Background information
on gender and asylum issues
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The Judith Stronach Women's Rights Fellowship

The Center for Gender and Refugee Studies is the beneficiary of an extraordinarily generous bequest by Judith Lee Stronach, a Berkeley resident and long-time peace activist and philanthropist. Judith's life was dedicated to nonviolence and social justice, and she tirelessly gave her time, as well as her financial resources, to a range of causes. Judith was a poet, teacher, and arts patron as well as a social activist. She worked with homeless people living on Berkeley streets, taught poetry to Berkeley middle school students, and belonged to the Buddhist Peace Fellowship and Berkeley Friends Meeting.

Judith Stronach

Judith began her participation in international human rights efforts in 1985 as an interpreter for the Guatemalan Office of Human Rights, then in exile in Mexico City. Her dedication to victims of human rights violations led her to work at a respite camp for Bosnian children traumatized by war, and she was a generous supporter of human rights NGOs. Judith expressed interest in CGRS's work shortly after it was founded in 1999. The Center's efforts on behalf of women asylum seekers resonated with her long-standing commitment to women's rights and human rights, and she especially valued the use of the law in service of social justice.

In her memory, CGRS has established the Judith Stronach Women's Rights Fellowship. Yearly, beginning in 2005, the fellowship awards summer positions to student whose background, idealism, and commitment to women's rights exemplify Judith's dedication to protecting the human rights of women, especially women refugees.

Summer 2005 Judith Stronach Fellows

    Angelica Cházaro
  • Angelica Cházaro, a Columbia University law student, has worked in Accra, Ghana at a legal aid clinic, and in New York City as an advocate for parents being investigated by the Administration for Children Services. Prior to law school, Angelica provided direct services to families at a domestic violence crisis shelter. During her undergraduate education in Women's Studies at Harvard University, she tutored Latina immigrants in an alternative to incarceration program, and before college Angelica collaborated in planning a UN youth conference. She is author of "Witnessing Memory and Surviving Domestic Violence: The Case of Rodi Alvarado Peña," a chapter in an immigration text from the Rockefeller Series on Latin American Studies.


  • Sara Ibrahim
  • Sara Ibrahim, a law student at American University Washington College of Law, has a graduate diploma from the American University in Cairo, Egypt, where she was a co-founder of the Middle East chapter of Student Action for Refugees. Sara has worked with asylum seekers as a student attorney in the International Human Rights Law Clinic at American University and as a Frankel Fellow with Human Rights First. She has also worked as Publication Editor for the Human Rights Brief. During her undergraduate education at George Washington University, Sara interned at the Office of Congresswoman Carolyn McCarthy and wrote for the U.N. Wire service

Summer 2006 Judith Stronach Fellows

    Meghann Boyle
  • Meghann Boyle is a third-year student at University of California, Hastings College of the Law, and an honors graduate of the University of Massachusetts at Amherst. Meghann previously interned with the Feminist Majority Foundation, the Office of State Senator Robert Antonioni (D-MA), and the National Legal Sanctuary for Community Advancement, a civil rights organization focused on addressing post-9/11 discrimination against Middle Eastern and Muslim communities.


  • Katherine Ruhl
  • Katharine Ruhl is a third-year student at King Hall School of Law, University of California, Davis. While at King Hall, she worked with the UC Davis Immigration Law Clinic on deportation defense and asylum cases, as well as advised criminal defense attorneys on the immigration consequences of criminal convictions. She came to law school after providing services to immigrant victims of domestic violence, asylum seekers, and immigrant families at Nationalities Service Center in Philadelphia.

  • Shonali Shome
  • Shonali Shome is a third-year Public Interest Law Scholar at Georgetown University Law Center. She worked with immigrant women and female asylees during her summer internship at the Tahirih Justice Center and through Georgetown's political asylum clinic, where she successfully represented a Guinean woman in immigration court. Shonali spent a semester working on an Initiative Against Trafficking in Persons at Global Rights, and prior to starting law school she spent three years as a Development Associate at the Global Fund for Women.

Summer 2007 Judith Stronach Fellows

Cassandra Lopez

Cassandra Lopez is a third-year law student at King Hall School of Law, University of California, Davis. While at King Hall, Cassandra served as a student attorney with the UC Davis Immigration Law Clinic, representing detained immigrants. During a summer internship at the Center on Race, Poverty and the Environment in Delano, California, Cassandra worked with farmworkers and rural communities struggling to improve the environmental quality of the Central Valley. She came to law school after working with the Chiapas Support Committee in Oakland and Legal Services for Children in San Francisco.

 

Joana Simonini

Joana Simonini is a third-year law student at the University of California, Hastings College of the Law. Last summer Joana interned in the Immigration Department at Canal Alliance, a Bay Area nonprofit organization, where she helped immigrants and asylum seekers prepare for immigration proceedings. Joana’s dedication to this area of law is demonstrated by her decision to enroll in the Refugee and International Human Rights Clinic at U.C. Hastings this fall, where she will continue working on some of the projects she began during the summer as a Stronach Fellow. Born and raised in Brazil, Joana studied law at the Universidade do Estado do Rio de Janiero. After moving to the United States, Joana worked with the Friends of the MST, an organization that supports the Brazilian Landless Workers Movement.

 

Joanna Wilson

Joanna Wilson is a third-year student at the University of Washington (UW) School of Law in Seattle and a second-year graduate student at UW’s Jackson School of International Studies. While at UW, Joanna worked with the law school’s Immigrant Family Advocacy Project and in the asylum unit of the Northwest Immigrant Rights Project. Prior to law school, Joanna served as a Peace Corps volunteer in the Philippines and as Managing Director for an international education company in Los Angeles.

 

CGRS Publications

* Brochure [4MB] 4

* Newsletter

Summer/Fall 20074

Spring 20074

Fall 20064

Summer 20064

Spring 20064

* Annual Report

Annual Report 20074

Annual Report 20064

Annual Report 20054

Annual Report 20044