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Lauren van Schilfgaarde

Assistant Professor of Law

UCLA School of Law

Lauren van Schilfgaarde is an Assistant Professor of Law at ULCA School of Law and previously was a UCLA Law Research Fellow and the San Manuel Band of Mission Indians Tribal Legal Development Clinic Director at UCLA Law. Van Schilfgaarde supervised live-client projects concerning Tribal governance and justice systems, ethics, cultural resource protection, voting, child welfare, and more. She received her undergraduate degree at Colorado College and her law degree from UCLA School of Law. Van Schilfgaarde previously served as the Tribal Law Specialist at the Tribal Law and Policy Institute (TLPI) in West Hollywood, California. At TLPI, van Schilfgaarde coordinated training and technical assistance to Tribal Courts, focusing primarily on Tribal Healing to Wellness Courts, restorative justice, Tribal Court infrastructure, and federal Indian law. At TLPI, van Schilfgaarde worked with more than eighty Tribal nations on various legal infrastructure projects. Van Schilfgaarde served as a law clerk for the Native American Rights Fund and Legal Aid Foundation of Los Angeles. She was a Public Interest Fellow at American Civil Liberties Union of Colorado. Van Schilfgaarde currently serves as a board member for the National Native American Bar Association, as vice-chair for the Native American Concerns Committee of the American Bar Association, as a commissioner for the Lawyers Network Commission of the Center for Reproductive Rights, and as a board member of the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation Child Well-Being Program.

The Implementation and Enhancement Training is offered as part of the Healing to Wellness Courts Training and Technical Assistance project -- A project delivered by the Tribal Law and Policy Institute (TLPI) under a grant from the Bureau of Justice Assistance.

Visit www.WellnessCourts.org for more information about the project. Visit www.Home.TLPI.org for more information about TLPI's many projects, services, and free publications.

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