- Posted September 18, 2012
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Cyberspace Sighting: ABA Young Lawyers Division educates youth voters through American-voter.org
The 2008 presidential election saw record youth voter turnout, and the American Bar Association Young Lawyers Division hopes to inspire similar levels of participation in this fall's election through its new American Voter effort. American Voter, which kicked off this month, is the division's nonpartisan public-service campaign dedicated to educating current and future voters about the history of voting rights in the United States and the importance of exercising the right to vote.
"It is important for the Young Lawyers Division to be involved today, not because of the quadrennial election season, but because we are leaders in our communities, representatives of the Constitution and are both the present and future of the legal profession," says David Courreges, project coordinator.
The American Voter project relies on strong participation from young lawyers across the country who can volunteer for voter registration, Election Day poll watching and community education. The centerpiece of the project is American-Voter.org, whose "primary role is to facilitate the engagement of young lawyers in the education of their communities," Courreges says.
The site features a "Go Packet" containing resources for lawyers or educators to present law-focused education projects in classroom or community gatherings, including step-by-step instructions on how to organize a rollout of American Voter or any education-based legal public-service project. Components include:
--A streaming and downloadable award-winning documentary, "Vote America! Honor the Fight, Exercise Your Right," which outlines the struggles of previous generations to guarantee the right to vote for all citizens.
--State-specific classroom handouts that provide information on voter registration, Election Day procedures, resources for disabled voters and more.
--Streaming lectures on election law and topics from leading university and election experts and law school professors.
--A guide that includes group activities such as mock debates and elections.
"American-Voter.org will also feature a call to action that includes voter registration and poll-watcher volunteer information, streaming live presentations of American Voter rollouts, social-media interaction, a WordPress blog updated daily and much more," Courreges says. "It is a multimedia educational effort aimed at encouraging a youth movement of involvement."
In addition, American-Voter.org includes comprehensive information for each state on voter registration, qualification and Election Day. The site will answer such questions as: What is the deadline to register to vote? Do I need to present ID at the polling place? How do I request an absentee ballot?
Besides covering the nuts and bolts of the election process, the project puts young lawyers "in a unique position to be able to tell high-school students about the importance of the electoral process from a nonpartisan perspective," says Chris Rogers, chair of the Young Lawyers Division. "Conveying the importance of the right to vote and providing information about voter registration in a format that is usable and recognizable for our audience are our primary goals for American Voter."
Published: Tue, Sep 18, 2012
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