Access in Action: Boyd Law's Rural Initiative
Many rural areas in Nevada face a shortage of legal professionals, creating "legal deserts" where residents have limited access to legal services. The William S. Boyd School of Law is working to close this gap through innovative programs that prepare and support students to work as externs in underserved communities.
Each summer, the Samuel S. Lionel Externship Program provides opportunities for students to work in judicial chambers and public defense and prosecuting offices in rural communities across Nevada. These externs are named Lionel Fellows and are eligible to receive a $5,000 summer scholarship through the Externship Program. Students externing in rural public defense offices may also qualify for a $6,500 stipend (for rising second-year students) or a $10,500 stipend (for rising third-year students) from the Nevada Department of Indigent Defense Services to help cover relocation and living expenses for the semester.
Boyd complements these opportunities with a curriculum focused on rural and tribal legal issues, faculty engagement, mentorship pipelines, and a task force dedicated to expanding access to legal education statewide.