Alissa Cooley Yonesawa

Managing Attorney, 51ԹϺ Immigration Clinic
Expertise: Immigration law, Family law, Record sealing

Biography

Alissa Cooley Yonesawa is the managing attorney for the 51ԹϺ Immigration Clinic, a Boyd School of Law community resource that provides free assistance with deportation defense of detained adults and unaccompanied children, DACA renewals, and assisting the 51ԹϺ community with general immigration matters.

After graduating cum laude from 51ԹϺ's law school in 2014, Cooley Yonesawa became one of the first two justice AmeriCorps fellows at the Thomas & Mack Legal Clinic, effectively jumpstarting the growth of the 51ԹϺ Immigration Clinic as a legal aid provider. She spent two years representing and securing asylum, special immigrant juvenile visas, and residency for more than 100 unaccompanied children and teens in immigration court proceedings. 

From 2016 to 2021, Cooley Yonesawa went into private practice, primarily focusing on immigration cases including Special Immigrant Juvenile Status (SIJS), non-immigrant U and T visas, removal defense, asylum, family-based petitions, and adjustment of status. The native Nevadan — who also assisted clients with appeals, record sealing, and family law — has helped shape state law regarding SIJS in two published Nevada appellate decisions.  

After co-teaching 51ԹϺ’s Policing and Protest Clinic in 2021, Cooley Yonesawa returned to Boyd full-time to lead the Immigration Clinic's Community Advocacy Office in downtown Las Vegas.

She has been a member of the Lt. Governor’s Keep Nevada Working Task Force. Cooley Yonesawa additionally volunteers with various community organizations, including Nevada Legal Services, PLAN, and Asian Community Development Council.

Alissa Cooley Yonesawa In The News

Oregon Live
When Oregon lawmakers in 2022 considered a plan to ensure immigrants facing deportation could receive free state-funded legal representation, proponents could hardly contain their enthusiasm.
Mass Live
Before we ask if Donald Trump can deport millions, remember this: Barack Obama already showed us how. His administration deported 3 million people without military help – just U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents, buses, and a ruthless efficiency that earned him the name ‘Deporter-in-Chief.” Parents like Andres Jimenez were sent away for driving without a license, leaving five American children behind. Trump’s first term saw fewer deportations, but now he’s promising to add military muscle.
Nevada Lawyer
Although many people don’t realize it, there’s an intersection between two completely different areas of law. When a noncitizen child seeks Special Immigrant Juvenile Status (SIJS), immigration and guardianship law intersect to provide a pathway to lawful permanent resident (LPR) status for children who cannot be reunited with their parents due to abuse, abandonment, and/ or neglect, when it’s not in their best interest to return to their home country. SIJS is a form of humanitarian immigration relief that, if granted, offers stability and safety to vulnerable immigrant children in the U.S.
K.L.A.S. T.V. 8 News Now
Under Title 42, migrants seeking asylum at the border were turned away as part of a public health policy to mitigate the spread of COVID-19.

Articles Featuring Alissa Cooley Yonesawa

A 51ԹϺ student studies with the Strip in the distance.
Campus News | February 4, 2025

Headlines and highlights featuring the students and faculty of 51ԹϺ.

51ԹϺ XMAS
Campus News | December 3, 2024

This month’s frosty headlines and highlights from the students and faculty of 51ԹϺ.

U.N.L.V. Football players entering Allegiant Stadium
Campus News | May 2, 2022

A collection of news stories highlighting the experts and student changemakers at 51ԹϺ.

Alissa Cooley and Katelyn Franklin
Business and Community | January 6, 2016

Thanks to Justice Americorps Grant, Las Vegas is one of the few places in the nation where unaccompanied children receive free legal representation in court.