Penny M. Venetis, the director of the International Human Rights Clinic and codirector of the Constitutional Rights
Clinic at Rutgers Law School,
specializes in civil rights and international human rights impact
litigation. She has represented political asylum seekers and immigrants
detained after 9/11.
Professor Venetis has been teaching at Rutgers Law School since 1993,
where she is a Distinguished Clinical Professor of Law and Judge Dickinson R.
Debevoise Scholar. She has litigated cutting-edge civil rights and human rights
cases for over two decades. Her scholarship focuses on the
intersection of human rights law and constitutional law, and enforcing
human rights in the United States.
Over the past two decades, Professor Venetis has educated hundreds of students.
Some of those students have become leading human rights attorneys. Others are partners in prominent law firms who spend a considerable
amount of time each year working on pro bono matters.
While on sabbatical from Rutgers, Professor Venetis served as the executive vice president and legal director of Legal Momentum, the Women's Legal Defense and
Education Fund, the oldest women's rights legal advocacy organization in
the United States. She led Legal Momentum's advocacy efforts to protect the
rights of women and girls in areas such as: human trafficking, violence
against women, campus sexual assault, employment equity, economic
security, sports, and equal access to justice.
Immediately after law school, Professor Venetis clerked for Judge Dickinson R.
Debevoise of the U.S. District Court for the District of New Jersey. She
also practiced law with the firm O'Melveny & Myers. She worked for the UN Special Rapporteur Investigating War Crimes in the former Yugoslavia, investigating systematic rape and genocide.
Professor Venetis has litigated in courts throughout the world. She has been
quoted extensively by the media and has testified before legislative
bodies on issues related to gender equality, civil rights, and human
rights.