• 18 people are interested
 

Advocacy and Campaigns Intern

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ORGANIZATION: National Council of La Raza

  • 18 people are interested

BACKGROUND

The National Council of La Raza (NCLR)--the largest national Hispanic civil rights and advocacy organization in the United States--works to improve opportunities for Hispanic Americans. Through its network of nearly 300 affiliated community-based organizations, NCLR reaches millions of Hispanics each year in 41 states, Puerto Rico, and the District of Columbia. To achieve its mission, NCLR conducts applied research, policy analysis, and advocacy, providing a Latino perspective in five key areas--assets/investments, civil rights/immigration, education, employment and economic status, and health. In addition, it provides capacity-building assistance to its Affiliates who work at the state and local level to advance opportunities for individuals and families.

SUMMARY

The NCLR California Regional Office, based in Downtown Los Angeles, serves as a central presence and point of contact for 61 NCLR Affiliates throughout the state. The regional team consists of staff representing key NCLR components, including Affiliate Member Services, Education, Advocacy and Capacity-Building, and Workforce Development.

Under the supervision of the Capacity-Building Strategists, the Advocacy - Campaigns Intern will work closely with various partners and California legislative affairs staff to assist in activities that further NCLR’s advocacy goals at the state and national level. Responsibilities will include providing support with research and outreach efforts that promote and strengthen the advocacy efforts of NCLR’s California nonprofit Affiliate network. The intern will learn the fundamentals of advocacy work, community organizing and outreach, and capacity-building.

This unpaid internship program is designed to complement and enhance academic studies through a variety of assignments and professional responsibilities. The ideal candidate should hold a Bachelor’s degree in Social Sciences and/ or is in the process of matriculating into a Master’s program with a focus in Public Policy, Advocacy, or Public Affairs.

NCLR seeks to host an intern with an immediate start date for a commitment of at least 15 hours per week for an 8-10 week period with flexibility to extend the internship. Intern must reside in Los Angeles, Riverside or Orange Counties during the time of the internship as NCLR does not cover relocation costs. Office hours are Monday through Friday, 8:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m., with flexibility to accommodate class and/or work schedule.

RESPONSIBILITIES

  • Duties including administrative support, research, and external communications related to special advocacy campaigns and related activities
  • Provide support to staff for community organizing and outreach
  • Data collection, data entry and management
  • General Internet research, and reporting
  • Light lifting, packing, assembly, and distribution of materials
  • Local and intrastate travel may be required

QUALIFICATIONS

  • All majors are encouraged to apply, but a strong interest in advocacy, public policy, and/or nonprofit management is required
  • Excellent written, oral, and proofreading skills
  • Strong computer skills, including knowledge of Microsoft Outlook, Word, and Excel, and internet research skills
  • Ability to think and work creatively and independently
  • Strong ability to prioritize and organize multiple tasks, attention to detail, work under pressure, and meet strict deadlines both independently and in a team
  • Exceptional attention to detail
  • Bilingual written and verbal ability (English/Spanish) is preferred, but not required
  • Responsible and professional work ethic

Equal Opportunity Employer. All qualified applicants will receive consideration without regard to race, color, national origin, marital status, religion, gender, age, disability, sexual orientation, gender identity or expression, personal appearance, family responsibilities, political affiliation, or enrollment in a college, university, technical school, or adult education institute.

SEND COVER LETTER, WRITING SAMPLE AND RESUME TO:

National Council of La Raza

Attn: Magdalena Mireles

550 S. Hope St., Suite 450

Los Angeles, CA 90071

ca-info@nclr.org

No phone calls please!

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About National Council of La Raza

Location:

523 W. 6th St., Suite 550, Los Angeles, CA 90014, US

Mission Statement

The National Council of La Raza (NCLR)--the largest national Hispanic civil rights and advocacy organization in the United States--works to improve opportunities for Hispanic Americans. Through its network of nearly 300 affiliated community-based organizations, NCLR reaches millions of Hispanics each year in 41 states, Puerto Rico, and the District of Columbia. To achieve its mission, NCLR conducts applied research, policy analysis, and advocacy, providing a Latino perspective in five key areas--assets/investments, civil rights/immigration, education, employment and economic status, and health. In addition, it provides capacity-building assistance to its Affiliates who work at the state and local level to advance opportunities for individuals and families.

Founded in 1968, NCLR is a private, nonprofit, nonpartisan, tax-exempt organization headquartered in Washington, DC, serving all Hispanic subgroups in all regions of the country. It has state and regional offices in Chicago, Los Angeles, Miami, New York, Phoenix, and San Antonio.

- See more at: http://www.nclr.org/index.php/about_us/#sthash.Vaxh8kui.dpuf

Description

NCLR traces its origins to the civil rights movement of the 1960s, as well as to previous efforts that preceded World War II, such as those related to early school and housing desegregation. Although Hispanics, especially Mexican Americans and Puerto Ricans, participated in both movements, they did not gain widespread media coverage or national visibility for their efforts. Without such recognition, legislation such as the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Economic Opportunity Act of 1964, while creating enormous change in other areas of the country, had relatively little impact on the Hispanic community.

In large part, the invisibility that plagued the Mexican American civil rights movement was a result of the movement’s geographic isolation, which caused it to be overshadowed by the more highly visible national movements. Additionally, Mexican Americans lacked the kinds of institutions that were critical to the success of the Black civil rights movement, and around which they could rally, unify, and organize. As Helen Rowan explained in a paper prepared for the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights in 1968:

There was no Mexican American organization equivalent of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) or the National Urban League; no Mexican American colleges; and virtually no financial or other help from outside the community itself. It has thus been extremely difficult for the leadership to develop and pursue strategies which would force public agencies and institutions to pay greater and more intelligent attention to Mexican American needs and to make changes, where necessary, to meet them.Recognizing that these hurdles imposed a critical barrier to the mobilization of an effective civil rights movement, a group of young Mexican Americans in Washington, DC decided to form a coordinating body that could provide technical assistance to existing Hispanic groups and bring them together into a single united front. In the early 1960s, this organization, called the National Organization for Mexican American Services (NOMAS), met with the Ford Foundation to present a funding proposal. The meeting was one of several factors that contributed to a Ford decision to finance a major study of Mexican Americans by scholars at the University of California Los Angeles (UCLA), the first grant of its kind in the United States.

Like other philanthropic and government entities, the Ford Foundation was concerned about the paucity of information on, and its own lack of expertise regarding, Mexican Americans. In this context, the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights began to hold a series of important and influential hearings on the status of Mexican Americans, and later other Latino groups, in the U.S. At the same time, the Ford Foundation decided to conduct a second, less academic and formal investigation, and subsequently hired three highly-respected Mexican Americans, Herman Gallegos, Dr. Julian Samora, and Dr. Ernesto Galarza, to travel throughout the Southwest and consult with other activists and leaders about what else might be done to help the Mexican American community.

The findings of these three leaders, published in two reports, revealed that Mexican Americans faced numerous obstacles, especially with respect to poverty. They also illustrated a clear need for more local, grassroots programmatic and advocacy organizations, for a source of ongoing technical assistance to help coordinate and strengthen the work of these local groups, and for national advocacy on behalf of Mexican Americans.

- See more at: http://www.nclr.org/index.php/about_us/history/#sthash.vZJtcdIu.dpuf

CAUSE AREAS

Advocacy & Human Rights
Justice & Legal
Politics
Advocacy & Human Rights, Justice & Legal, Politics

WHEN

We'll work with your schedule.

WHERE

550 S. Hope St., Suite 450Los Angeles, CA 90071

(34.04972,-118.25565)
 

SKILLS

GOOD FOR

N/A

REQUIREMENTS

  • 15hrs/week

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