Nadine Donovan

Nadine Nasser Donovan

Lecturer


BA, summa cum laude, Fordham University
JD, cum laude, Boston College Law School


Biography

Ms. Donovan received her JD, cum laude, from Boston College Law School in 1993. After graduating, Ms. Donovan joined the New York City Law Department, Office of the Corporation Counsel. She worked in the Family Court Division until 1995 and then worked in the Tort Division until 1996. From 1996 until January 2004, she worked at the firm of Rindler·Morgan PC in Boston, becoming a partner in 2002. From July 2004 to April 2011, she was ­of counsel to Martin, Magnuson, McCarthy & Kenney in Boston. In April 2011, she became a partner at the firm of Mulvey, Ennis, Keefe, and Donovan, LLC. Ms. Donovan received her BA, summa cum laude, from Fordham University and has studied at the Sorbonne in Paris. Ms. Donovan has taught in the LLM program for thirteen years.

Activities & Engagements

No upcoming activities or engagements.

Courses

Health Justice Practicum: LAW JD 893

2 credits

The Health Justice Practicum is a new one-semester, two-credit course enrolling a maximum of six students. Students will collaborate with frontline health care providers who serve marginalized populations on projects that require legal and problem-solving skills and where providers and/or patients have identified a systemic problem affecting patients' health and wellbeing. In Spring 2022, we will be collaborating with Project RESPECT, an integrated obstetrics, addiction medicine, and behavioral health clinic at Boston Medical Center that serves low-income pregnant and parenting people in recovery from substance use disorders (SUDs), especially opioid use disorders (OUDs). Project RESPECT providers have identified a problem in Massachusetts law that significantly harms low-income parents in recovery from SUDs and their children, disproportionately harming Black, Indigenous, or other people of color (BIPOC) families. Children born to women in evidence-based medication-assisted recovery (e.g., methadone treatment) must be reported at birth to the Department of Children and Families as if the mother were actively using drugs. Children born to BIPOC mothers are more likely than children born to white mothers both to be reported to child protection authorities and to be separated from their families as a result. The trauma of custody disruption has demonstrated serious effects on both recovering parents and child health and development. We will explore and advocate for possible legal and policy advocacy solutions to these issues--for example, changes in mandatory reporting laws and reformed child protection agency practices to eliminate discriminatory decisionmaking. Students will attend group meetings as well as work on research and advocacy. The project work will allow students to hone their research, analytical, writing, presentation, and problem-solving skills. Regular group meetings will deepen students' understanding of their projects by providing a broader context. Students will also meet individually or in teams with the faculty supervisor to discuss their project work. GRADING NOTICE: This class will not offer the CR/NC/H option.

FALL 2023: LAW JD 893 A1 , Sep 6th to Dec 6th 2023
Days Start End Credits Instructors Bldg Room
Fri 10:40 am 12:10 pm 2 Debbie FreitasCristina Freitas LAW 508
SPRG 2024: LAW JD 893 B1 , Jan 19th to Apr 19th 2024
Days Start End Credits Instructors Bldg Room
Fri 10:30 am 12:00 pm 2 Cristina FreitasDebbie Freitas LAW 518