Peter Schey is a prominent legal expert and advocate for human rights, serving as the Founder, President, and Executive Director of the Center for Human Rights and Constitutional Law since 1980. Schey co-founded El Rescate Legal in 2004 to provide free legal services to Central American refugees. Additionally, Schey has held academic positions, including Lecturer at the University of California, Los Angeles School of Law, focusing on migration patterns and nationalism. Schey's previous roles include Board Member for Hermandad Mexicana Nacional and Vice-Chairperson of the Individual Rights Section at the Los Angeles County Bar Association, along with teaching immigration law at various institutions. Schey also founded the National Immigration Law Center and established a legal aid unit to support low-income immigrants in Southern California. Schey earned a Doctor of Law from California Western School of Law and a Bachelor's degree in Psychology from the University of California, Berkeley.
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Center for Human Rights and Constitutional Law
Advancing Human Rights for Marginalized Communities, with a focus on Undocumented Immigrants and Children, ⚖️ Since its incorporation in 1980, the Center has provided a wide range of legal services to vulnerable low-income victims of human and civil rights violations and technical support and training to hundreds of legal aid attorneys and paralegals in the areas of immigration law, constitutional law, and complex and class action litigation. The Center has achieved major victories in numerous class action cases in the courts of the United States and before international bodies that have benefited hundreds of thousands of immigrant children, asylum seekers, immigrant workers, and other vulnerable populations. A list of the Center’s successful major litigation cases: Plyler v. Doe (1982): Successfully challenged a Texas statute prohibiting over 200,000 undocumented children from attending public schools. Reno v. Catholic Social Services (1993): Granting 250,000 immigrants their right to apply for legalization under the 1986 amnesty law. Reno v. Flores, 507 U.S. 292 (1993): National class action on behalf of children denied release pending the outcome of deportation proceedings. League of United Latin American Citizens v. Wilson (1997): State-wide class action challenging constitutionality of California proposition 187 denying health care, social services and education to suspected undocumented immigrants. Perez-Olano v. Gonzalez (2008) Nationwide class action enjoining policies and practices blocking abused, abandoned, and neglected immigrant children’s access to protective services and lawful permanent residence. We Are Am. v. Maricopa County Bd. of Supervisors (2013): Class action enjoining arrest and prosecution of non-smuggler migrants for conspiracy to transport themselves.