Tag

Pro Bono

Browsing

2022.02.28 16:07
Kim Ye-won, a leading disability-rights lawyer and director of the Disability Rights Law Center, is known for her warm, accessible approach and extraordinary communication skills. She builds rapport with clients across cognitive and physical disabilities, meets people at their level, and often remains a trusted supporter long after cases close. Her bedside manner and steady presence make clients feel heard and respected, and she routinely makes herself available even in crisis situations at odd hours.

Believing that good intentions must be matched by skill, Kim pursued professional training as a social worker and sexual-violence counselor to avoid relying on intuition alone. In a notable sexual-abuse case she reframed invasive courtroom questioning into the client’s own language and submitted recorded testimony to prevent re-traumatization. She also practices an atypical pro bono model: she does not charge financially disadvantaged clients, funds her office through research, lectures and writing, and channels any surplus to causes in need — treating law as a tool for social good rather than personal gain.

Kim is also an outspoken critic of policies that sideline the voices of those they claim to protect. She has challenged administrative practices in child protection that can disregard children’s agency, citing cases where poorly designed procedures caused prolonged harm. Her practical advice to younger lawyers: start small—join committees, offer short pro bono consultations, and gradually expand involvement to discover whether public-interest work fits your strengths and sustainment.


Original source: [로이어 인사이드]”언제나 당신의 시선으로”… 약자를 위한 ‘원더우먼’ 김예원 변호사 (Source: the news outlet; please refer to the original article.)

2019-01-31 06:00
Kim Ye‑won is a solo nonprofit lawyer who runs the Disability Rights Law Center in Seoul, dedicating her practice to people with developmental disabilities, disabled children and women who struggle to access legal help. Her work is visceral and public: she once removed her prosthetic eye in court to plead for the maximum sentence in a case where a five‑year‑old child was blinded, and she has represented clients under extremely constrained conditions through extensive pro bono work. The center operates on minimal resources — the Seoul Bar Association provided office space — and Kim combines strategic litigation with direct client advocacy to advance disability rights and accountability.

Her career is inseparable from motherhood. As a mother of three, she has brought infants into court when childcare was unavailable, famously breastfeeding a 50‑day‑old in the courtroom to avoid missing critical hearings. Kim candidly recounts regrets about placing her first child full‑time in daycare at 82 days and explains that as a self‑employed public interest lawyer she could not take extended leave for later children, forcing practical choices that many working mothers face. Her visible actions sparked strong reactions — surprise from judges, solidarity from fellow women lawyers, and public admiration that she treats as ordinary necessity rather than heroism.

Kim’s personal history shapes her commitment: she lost sight in one eye due to a medical accident, earned law school on full scholarship, and entered public interest work through experiences at Dongcheon and the Seoul Disability Human Rights Center before founding her own center in 2017. Supported by a like‑minded husband who is a judge, the couple regularly donates a portion of their income to charities; Kim channels the rest of her time into client work, household routines she calls a hobby, and relentless fieldwork that keeps her deeply engaged with clients’ lives. Her practice demonstrates a pragmatic, embodied approach to legal advocacy — one that melds lived experience, parental responsibility and tireless pro bono service to protect society’s most vulnerable.


Original source: [W 인터뷰] 장애인권법센터 김예원 변호사 “아이 안고 변론하는 것도 ‘복’이죠” (Source: the news outlet; please refer to the original article.)

  • 2018.04.05 15:09
  •  Kim Ye-won has been named the inaugural recipient of the Kwak Jeong-suk Human Rights Award, established to honor the late activist and former lawmaker who devoted her life to disability rights. The award committee recognized Kim for her tireless legal support in disability rights cases. Though born with a medical accident that cost her vision in one eye, Kim says she did not set out to be a disability-rights lawyer; her path shifted after handling disability-rights cases at a public-interest foundation and later at the Seoul Disability Rights Center.

    Her career includes a landmark 2014 Supreme Court victory that recognized damage to a prosthetic leg as an occupational injury, and years of public-interest work defending invisible and systemic discrimination. In 2017 she founded the nonprofit Disability Rights Law Center, providing free legal services and refusing fees and donations to prioritize clients who might otherwise remain unheard. Kim has taken on difficult cases—from long-term labor exploitation where courts sometimes award minimal compensation, to the underreported sexual violence faced by disabled women—and consistently emphasizes that disability rights encompass more than mobility: they include information access, cultural participation, and full civic equality.

    Known for describing herself as someone whose “personality became her profession,” Kim pursues justice by asking difficult questions and empowering clients to reclaim their voices. She finds reward not only in legal wins but in witnessing survivors grow stronger and recognize they are not to blame. A mother expecting her third child and still actively providing legal support in late pregnancy, Kim frames the award as encouragement to continue steady, long-term work rather than as an endpoint: she hopes simply to keep doing this work for years to come.


    Original source: 장애인 인권 위한 그녀의 소걸음 (Source: the news outlet; please refer to the original article.)