Voice Up Publishing Incorporated

Voice Up Public Health & Human Rights Internship 100% Remote

New York City, NY • Posted Today
Onsite Internship General

Voice Up Public Health & Human Rights Internship 8-Week Overview
Anchored in the Voice Up case study Dr. Opal Lee: The Walk That Never Ends, this 8-week general-track internship trains students to connect historical human-rights analysis to present-day public health action.

Program Overview
This internship uses the life of Dr. Opal Lee the 99-year-old Grandmother of Juneteenth, a civil rights icon, breast cancer survivor, and Presidential Medal of Freedom recipient as a blueprint for sustained purpose. Born in Marshall, Texas in 1926, she survived a mob that destroyed her family’s home on Juneteenth 1939, spent 24 years as a teacher and counselor, and walked from Fort Worth to Washington, D.C. at age 89 to help make Juneteenth a federal holiday. She now lends her voice to the American Cancer Society’s VOICES of Black Women study, the largest research effort ever dedicated to closing the health-data gap facing Black women. Interns build historical analysis, community-based research literacy, trust-building, campaign design, and grassroots advocacy skills while directly supporting this study’s outreach goals.

Voice Up Principles
Throughout the program, interns are expected to explicitly apply Voice Up’s five guiding principles: Collaboration, meaning all are welcome; Humility, meaning we all have much to learn; Precision, meaning all the details matter; Patience, meaning we all need forgiveness; and Empathy, meaning we must understand your why.

Weekly Structure
Week 1 Orientation & Foundations: Study Dr. Lee’s biography and the Voice Up Principles. Deliverable: a personal statement connecting your own motivation to public health equity work.

Week 2 Historical Context: Examine historical medical exploitation of Black communities and its legacy of mistrust in health institutions. Deliverable: an annotated bibliography on the research gap affecting Black women’s health outcomes.

Week 3 The Research Gap: Study the VOICES of Black Women initiative in depth, including its design and community-based participatory research methods. Deliverable: a plain-language public brief explaining the study.

Week 4 Trust-Building & Community Engagement: Identify trusted messengers and outreach channels within historically marginalized communities. Deliverable: a draft outreach plan.

Week 5 Campaign Design & Health Communication: Translate the outreach plan into real campaign materials. Deliverable: a campaign asset package, including social posts, a flyer, and talking points.

Week 6 Grassroots Advocacy & Coalition Building: Execute outreach with real community partners and contacts. Interns never collect personal health information; all enrollment happens through the official ACS portal. Deliverable: an outreach log.

Week 7 Intergenerational Equity & Economic Freedom: Connect health access to economic ownership and narrative control, using the case study’s Byron Allen reflection questions.

Deliverable: a draft of the written analysis paper.
Week 8 Synthesis & Capstone: Finalize and present both capstone components to the Voice Up cohort.

Capstone Requirements
The capstone has two parts. The Outreach & Enrollment Project asks interns to plan, build, and execute a real awareness campaign supporting VOICES of Black Women enrollment, tracked through a weekly outreach log and summarized in a final report covering channels used, people reached, and partners engaged. The Written Analysis Paper, six to ten pages, addresses the historical research gap, Dr. Lee’s life as a case study in sustained purpose, the current public health crisis facing Black women, the economic dimension of exclusion, and concrete recommendations with each section explicitly applying at least one Voice Up Principle.

Competencies Developed
Public health equity and disparities analysis; community-based participatory research; trust-building in historically marginalized communities; campaign design and health communication; historical analysis of medical exploitation; grassroots advocacy and coalition building; intergenerational health equity; human rights framing of health access; and outreach and enrollment campaign execution.

Evaluation
Interns log weekly hours, submit each weekly deliverable on the Voice Up learning platform, and meet for a weekly one-on-one supervisor check-in to review progress and troubleshoot outreach challenges. Final evaluation considers completion and quality of all eight weekly deliverables, the integrity and reach of the outreach project, and the rigor of the written analysis, including how well it integrates the Voice Up Principles. A complete portfolio is submitted in Week 8 for practicum and credit documentation.

Resources & Contacts
VOICES of Black Women, American Cancer Society: a free, observational, online study for Black women ages 20 to 60, with no drugs or tests required. Contact or (800) 494-4113. Study site: voices.cancer.org. Enrollment portal: studyportal.cancer.org/enroll/voices. Featured reading: Opal Lee and What It Means to Be Free, written by Alice Faye Duncan and illustrated by Keturah A. Bobo.

Fuller Road, Alabama, and the stretch of highway Opal Lee walked out of Fort Worth, Texas, do not appear on the same map and were never meant to intersect. But measured by what each road was actually built to do close the distance between a truth and its recognition, mile by mile, conversation by conversation, generation by generation they were always headed toward the same place. That is, in the end, the only kind of freedom either family ever really had to offer: not a single date on a calendar, but a method for refusing to let the gap outlive the people who could close it.

Back to Job Search