Stanford Center for Racial Justice Welcomes Spring 2024 Interns

Each quarter, the Stanford Center for Racial Justice hosts part-time internships for Stanford University law students, graduate students, and undergraduate juniors and seniors to support our work to address some of the most challenging problems in our country resulting from the history and persistence of racism. We are excited to announce our amazing Spring 2024 cohort, who collectively bring a stellar range of personal, academic, and professional experiences that will contribute to the advancement of racial justice!

Meet Our Spring  2024 Interns

 

Meet Our Spring 2024 Interns 2

Isabelle Anzabi | Isabelle is a senior from Philadelphia pursuing a Bachelor’s degree in Political Science with tracks in Elections, Representation, & Governance and Political Economy & Development and a minor in Psychology. Her academic interests include technology policy and increasing access to justice, which present unique ethical and legal queries. With experiences spanning across public policy, computer science, and law, Isabelle brings a multidisciplinary perspective to her work. In particular, her interest in developing human-centered solutions to AI and technology policy stems from her mixed-methods research with SLS’s Legal Design Lab. On campus, Isabelle is currently a fellow with the SLS Constitutional Law Center and an editor on the Stanford Technology Law Review. She is an All Tech Is Human mentee and a Paragon Policy Fellow working with the City of San Jose on AI policy. In her free time, Isabelle enjoys artistic and creative pursuits. 

 

Meet Our Spring 2024 Interns 3

Kaidi Dai | Kaidi is an undergraduate senior from the Bay Area majoring in International Relations and minoring in Modern Languages. Her specializations within I.R. are East & South Asia and Social Development & Human Well Being, which combine to reflect her aspiration to investigate the ways that international events affect local BIPOC communities. Kaidi has engaged with mass incarceration in the context of both legal analysis and field work through her internship with the San Francisco Public Defense Office and is passionate about promoting multicultural accessibility and sensitivity within the law. In her free time, Kaidi can be found playing video games, trying to learn new languages, or hanging out with her dog, Misa.

 

 

Meet Our Spring 2024 Interns

Evan Engel | Evan is a 3L at Stanford Law School from Los Angeles, California. His interests focus on the intersection of race, education, and civil rights and constitutional law. At Stanford, Evan has been Alumni Relations Chair of the Black Law Students Association, Editor-in-Chief of the Stanford Law and Policy Review, and Associate Managing Editor of Stanford Law Review. He has also served as a teaching assistant for Professor Jane Schacter’s Fourteenth Amendment class and for Professor Jim Steyer’s Shaping America’s Future lecture series. Evan enjoys chess, running, and loves to cook, and he keeps a running list of his favorite hip-hop albums of the year. He holds a BA in philosophy from The George Washington University where he was a Thacher-Reynolds Fellow, primarily researching issues within the philosophies of mind and of time.

 

Meet Our Spring 2024 Interns 4

Tanvi Kohli | Tanvi is a first-year law student at Stanford Law School. Before law school, she graduated from Washington University in St. Louis and received a Bachelors in International Affairs. After graduating, she interned with the Consortium for Gender, Security, and Human Rights, worked in direct services with survivors of torture, refugees, and asylum seekers at the Boston Center for Refugee Health and Human Rights, and was awarded a Fulbright grant to complete research in Mumbai and Kutch, India. At SLS, she volunteers with the Landesa Pro Bono Project and is a member of the Stanford Environmental Law Journal.

 

 

Meet Our Spring 2024 Interns 1

Autumn Parrott | Autumn is a senior at Stanford University, originally from Texarkana, TX, pursuing a degree in Bioengineering. In the labs of Dr. KC Huang and Dr. David Relman, Autumn’s research focuses on synthetic gut microbial communities, exploring the intricate interactions between microorganisms and their host organisms during the process of microbial colonization. She is particularly proud of her recent capstone project designing a hand-crank-powered bubble CPAP for premature neonates in low resource settings.

Beyond her academic pursuits, Autumn is a member of the Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma, and actively contributes to the Native community on campus as president of Natives in Medicine, co-chair for the alumni committee for Powwow, and previously as a Resident Assistant at Muwekma-Tah-Ruk and staff for the Stanford Native Immersion Program (SNIP).

Outside of these commitments, Autumn finds joy in podcasts and was delighted to be a Braden Grant recipient, allowing her to create her own podcast centered around Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women. She enjoys surfing, hiking, and beading in her free time.

Meet Our Spring 2024 Communications Assistant

 

Stanford Center for Racial Justice Welcomes Communications Assistant

Nicholas Mullins | Nicholas is a undergraduate senior majoring in Urban Studies and a concentration in Urban Society & Social Change. He grew up in Columbus, Ohio and is broadly passionate about transportation planning, creative design, and using social activism to advance equity. In his time at Stanford, Nicholas has been a RA (resident assistant) in a row house, co-president of the Black Student Union, and has spent his summers interning at the U.S. Department of Transportation and conducting primary urban ethnographic research in New York City through a Stanford educational grant. He is also involved in many of the design, music, and creative communities on campus as explorative hobbies!