Tanya Raja is a researcher working at the intersection of AI policy, labor, and housing justice.
In law school, she was a Fellow for the Arthur Garfield Hays Civil Liberties Program and served as an editor of the New York University Law Review. She advocated for low-income tenants in New York City through The Legal Aid Society’s Housing Clinic and a legal internship with Communities Resist. As a policy intern for New Economy Project, Tanya also joined a growing city-wide movement to build permanently affordable housing and advance community control over land. In her summer internships, she conducted legal and factual research for civil rights litigation at the National Center for Law and Economic Justice, and she supported Know Your Rights campaigns for farmworkers through the New York Civil Liberties Union.
Prior to law school, she worked at the University of California Office of the President, where she composed overviews of the policy issues and expenditure plans of the University and evaluated UC campus proposals to utilize earmarked funds—such as those addressing student food and housing insecurity—allocated by the California legislature.
Tanya holds a J.D. from NYU Law and a B.A. in Economics from UC Irvine.
In law school, she was a Fellow for the Arthur Garfield Hays Civil Liberties Program and served as an editor of the New York University Law Review. She advocated for low-income tenants in New York City through The Legal Aid Society’s Housing Clinic and a legal internship with Communities Resist. As a policy intern for New Economy Project, Tanya also joined a growing city-wide movement to build permanently affordable housing and advance community control over land. In her summer internships, she conducted legal and factual research for civil rights litigation at the National Center for Law and Economic Justice, and she supported Know Your Rights campaigns for farmworkers through the New York Civil Liberties Union.
Prior to law school, she worked at the University of California Office of the President, where she composed overviews of the policy issues and expenditure plans of the University and evaluated UC campus proposals to utilize earmarked funds—such as those addressing student food and housing insecurity—allocated by the California legislature.
Tanya holds a J.D. from NYU Law and a B.A. in Economics from UC Irvine.
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