
Marisol Le贸n teaches CTSJ 212, 214, 221, and 250. Her courses are designed for students dedicated to social justice and interested in leveraging the law as a tool for positive social change.
Professor Le贸n is a civil rights attorney with the California Department of Justice, where she conducts large-scale civil and criminal investigations and litigates matters related to immigrants鈥 rights, consumer protection, workers' rights, conditions of confinement in jails and immigration detention centers, police practices, voting rights, and Title IX. She previously conducted research and lived with Brazil鈥檚 Landless Rural Workers Movement, and worked with Friends of the Earth-Mexico in Chiapas, Mexico, collaborating with social movements organizing against mega-development projects displacing rural communities and undermining indigenous autonomy.
She has published autobiographical pieces, editorials, and research articles in the Los Angeles Times; Windows into My World: Latino Youth Write Their Lives; the Yale Journal of Latin American Studies; the Harvard Journal on Racial & Ethnic Justice; 顿颈谩濒辞驳辞, a publication of the Center for Latino Policy Research at DePaul University; and the Inter-American and European Human Rights Journal. Professor Le贸n is the recipient of the Paul and Daisy Soros Fellowship for New Americans, the American Bar Association鈥檚 鈥淥n the Rise鈥擳op 40 Young Lawyers Award,鈥 and the Hispanic National Bar Association鈥檚 鈥淭op Lawyers Under 40 Award,鈥 which honors exceptionally accomplished lawyers who have demonstrated professional excellence, integrity, leadership, commitment to the Hispanic community, and dedication to improving the legal profession.
Le贸n is also Occidental's pre-law advisor.