Improving Access to Justice for Immigrant Crime Victims and Children: Effects of and Needs for Judicial Training and Peer Support (December 30, 2021) [pdf]

From 2017 through 2019 NIWAP ran the Judicial Training Network, a training project led by a national faculty of six judges (CA, DE, IL MO, TX, WI). Five states participated in the JTN in which teams of state court judges working with state judicial education staff partners ran the project in each state the offered a series of in-person and on-line trainings on a range of legal issues that arise in cases involving immigrant crime victims and immigrant children. In each of the six participating state (FL, LA, MI, MO, MS, NM). NIWAP and the national faculty also provided on call technical assistance to the state team judges who developed expertise in serving immigrant crime victims and children through the project. After the grant funding for the JTN ended we interviewed a sample of the judicial participants in the project to learn about their impressions of the JTN and about their future training and technical assistance needs. This report makes findings about the effectiveness of this training effort and provides insights into training, support, and technical assistance needs for the future. The insights gained in this report will be helpful to the participating states, and also to the National Judicial Network (NJN) that NIWAP is currently co-leading with the National Council of Juvenile and Family Court Judges. The NJN is a national peer to peer training project involving over 130 judges and Tribal judges from across the country. NJN members are judges interested in human trafficking and issues affecting immigrant victims of crime and abuse whom judges encounter as they hear cases across the country. Judges and judicial officers of all types are invited to join the NJN. To learn more and register follow this link. https://niwaplibrary.wcl.american.edu/pubs/njn-outreach-flyer