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Karin Wang is Vice-President of Programs at the Asian Pacific American Legal Center
(APALC), the nation's largest legal and civil rights organization serving Asian
American and Pacific Islander communities. Before assuming her current position,
Karin directed APALC's immigrant rights project and was instrumental in filing a
landmark civil rights complaint against Los Angeles County on behalf of limited-English-speaking
welfare recipients. Her organization's efforts led to major reforms in regard to
the department's services to immigrants, as well as a payment of $1.7 million in
back benefits. Karin also ran the first Los Angeles field office of the U.S. Department
of Health & Human Services, Office for Civil Rights, enforcing federal civil rights
laws across the Southwest.
Karin dedicates her advocacy efforts to serve those in her community whose voices
and concerns are rarely heard, shifting their understanding of justice in this country
by illustrating how so many of their struggles are linked to larger issues. In addition
to her role as President of the Asian Pacific American Bar Association, Karin continues
to be a leader in both state and national bar associations to this end. She was
the former chair of the California State Bar's Standing Committee on the Delivery
of Legal Services and serves on the State Bar's Justice Gap Task Force, which educates
law professionals and solicits personal contributions to close the gap between the
legal needs of poverty-stricken families with the federal and state funds that they
are afforded. She has also previously served as the co-chair of the National Asian
Pacific American Bar Association's Pro Bono & Community Service Committee and is
an active member of the Executive Committee for the NAPABA 2010 Convention in Los
Angeles.
For the past five years, Karin has been deeply dedicated to the legal struggle for
marriage equality in California. Through advocacy and community education, she strived
to broaden the views of various interest groups by presenting a cogent and persuasive
counterpoint to protests against gay marriage in Asian Pacific American communities,
illustrating that the interests of each group involved are connected, making them
indicative of even greater civil rights issues in immigrant communities. She is
a founding committee member of API Equality-LA and she helped to file several amicus
briefs in the California Supreme Court in support of marriage equality, including
a brief on behalf of 63 Asian American organizations in the original marriage case.
For her advocacy, Lambda Legal honored Karin with their organization's "Liberty
Award," and the NAPABA named her as one of its "Best Lawyers Under 40."
Karin is a graduate of UC-Berkeley's Boalt Hall School of Law, where she was the
Editor-in-Chief of the Asian Law Journal. Following graduation, she was an associate
at Morrison & Foerster LLP in San Francisco. Karin is proud to be Taiwanese American
and credits her involvement in Taiwanese summer camp with putting her on the path
to a career working in civil rights and on behalf of the Asian American community.
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