Editor's Note: As Asian Pacific American Heritage Month comes
to a close, we republish a selection from a series of leadership profiles
developed by the defunct site PoliticalCircus.com in May 2002.
By Takei Okidata
©2002 PoliticalCircus.com
May 3, 2002
Margaret Fung is Executive Director of the Asian American Legal Defense and
Education Fund, a New York-based organization founded in 1974 to protect and
promote the civil rights of Asian Americans through litigation, advocacy and
community education. She graduated from Barnard College and received her law
degree from New York University Law School, where she was a member of the NYU
Law Review, an Arthur Garfield Hays Civil Liberties Fellow and a Root-Tilden
Scholar. Fung received an honorary LL.D. from City University of New York (CUNY)
Law School in 1997.
In April 1992, she was invited to testify before the House Judiciary
Committee on the Voting Rights Language Assistance Act, which requires the
provision of bilingual ballots and assistance to over 200,000 Asian American
voters nationwide. Her advocacy efforts led to the first fully translated
Chinese-language ballots in New York City for the 1994 elections. She was also
co-counsel for defendant-intervenors in the 1996 redistricting case, Diaz v.
Silver, in which a federal court found that Asian Americans constitute a
"community of interest" within New York's 12th Congressional District.
She also organized AALDEF's first exit poll of Asian American voters in New York
City in 1988. These multilingual voter surveys have been conducted in every
major election since then, with over 5,000 Asian American voters polled in the
2000 presidential election.
Fung won a landmark ruling from the New York Court of Appeals in 1986, which
required for the first time that the impacts of new development on low-income
tenants and small businesses be considered under state environmental laws. This
case, Chinese Staff and Workers Association v. City of New York, blocked the
construction of a proposed 21-story condominium in Manhattan's Chinatown and has
been used as a legal precedent by other groups challenging the effects of
secondary displacement in their neighborhoods.
Fung serves on the boards of directors of the National Asian Pacific American
Legal Consortium, the National Association of Public Interest Law, the National
Committee on Responsive Philanthropy, and the New York Civil Liberties Union.
She was appointed by Governor Mario Cuomo to serve on the New York State
Temporary Commission on Constitutional Revision and by Mayor Rudolph Giuliani to
serve on the Mayor's Task Force on Police/Community Relations, which was formed
after the police torture of Haitian immigrant Abner Louima. She also serves on
Community Board #1 in Lower Manhattan, which plays an advisory role in the
rebuilding of the World Trade Center site after September 11.
Fung was named one of the nation's "20 Lawyers Making a
Difference," by American Bar Association’s Barrister Magazine in 1992 and
has won awards from the Asian American Bar Association of New York, the Asian
American Lawyers Association of Massachusetts, the NYU Law School Recent
Graduate Award, and the "I Love an Ethical New York" award from Common
Cause-NY. In 1990-91, she was awarded a Charles H. Revson Fellowship for the
City of New York at Columbia University, where she studied journalism.