Co-founding partner Jennifer Wu is profiled in the just released Chambers DEI Global Report 2024 from Chambers and Partners. 

In a first-person piece, Jennifer discusses her role as a prominent advocate for victims of anti-Asian violence. She has represented nearly every person who died of anti-Asian violence in New York in the pandemic. “I became a lawyer in part to give voice to those who do not feel empowered to use their own,” she says in the feature. “When anti-Asian violence surged in the pandemic, I felt a responsibility to speak up and help.” 

This is the first year that Chambers and Partners has produced a Chambers DEI Global Report. The 111-page publication identifies DEI-related trends from the regions Chambers covers, which include Latin America, Europe, and the Asia Pacific and Greater China Region, in addition to the United States. Jennifer’s profile is one of three relating to Asian American Pacific Islander justice and affinity, one of the major DEI themes—along with voting rights and next-level mentoring—that the Chambers DEI Global Report 2024 identified in the United States this year.