The Farmworker Legal Assistance Clinic provides students with the opportunity to represent indigent farmworkers, assuming primary responsibility for client matters, developing key lawyering skills, and collaborating with other clinic students, supervisors, and community partners. In its deportation defense practice, the clinic has obtained guardianship orders and special findings from Family and Surrogate’s courts in twenty upstate New York counties, thereby allowing young farmworkers to apply for Special Immigrant Juvenile Status, a particular form of immigration relief available to minors that provides a path to permanent legal residence. Several of these were the first such cases to be heard in their respective counties. The clinic recently opened an office in the Mohawk Valley Region and launched a Child and Youth Farmworker Access to Justice Project. The clinic also filed a successful civil lawsuit on behalf of nearly two dozen Guatemalan workers to recover the illegal recruitment fees they were forced to pay as part of their recruitment to work in the United States on H-2A agricultural guestworker visas. In the wake of the “zero tolerance” family separation policy, the clinic represented five separated families, achieving U.S.-based reunification in all five cases. In 2019, the Association of Public and Land-grant Universities (APLU) named Cornell University the winner of the C. Peter Magrath Community Engagement Scholarship Award in recognition of the university’s (including the law school’s) engagement with farmworkers.