STANFORD LAW — When Stanford Law School Professor James Sonne launched the school’s Religious Liberty Clinic in 2013, there were no blueprints to consult or models on which to build. Stanford Law School’s clinic was the first of its type in the country. This year, as the clinic celebrates 10 years of pioneering education and advocacy on behalf of all faiths—from Buddhists to Seventh-day Adventists—Sonne reflects on a decade spent guiding students in what he calls a “deeply human” area of the law. As he looks ahead to the next 10 years, Sonne envisions similar clinics populating law schools across the country. Indeed, since the SLS clinic was founded, at least five other schools have established clinics focused on religious liberty: Harvard Law School, Yale Law School, Notre Dame Law School, Pepperdine Caruso School of Law, and the University of Texas School of Law. What Sonne launched at SLS as a pilot project a decade ago now leads a clinical movement.