Caleb Alexander-McKinzie recognized as one of the top ten law students of the year

Caleb Alexander-McKinzie, a third-year student at the 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock William H. Bowen School of Law, has been recognized by as one of the top ten law students of the year.
Alexander-McKinzie grew up in DeValls Bluff, graduated from high school in Des Arc, and started college at UCA immediately after graduation. But soon after starting, he realized he needed a break. That break turned into a 10-year hiatus.
During that time, he worked in industrial construction and Live Immersive Training for a military contractor. These jobs meant wide travel, good pay, and a few months of down time each year. During his time off, he began volunteering with , a Central Arkansas non-profit that serves the unsheltered community, building relationships and meeting the immediate material needs of people experiencing homelessness. The goal is simple: Meet people where they are with what they need. No questions. No apologies. Just help. As Alexander-McKinzie built relationships, he found a continuing thread through each story 鈥 many people were experiencing homelessness due to a bad experience with the legal system in some capacity.
These stories led him to law, and the passion for telling them led him to law school.
鈥淢y goal was always law school after I met my friends in the unsheltered community,鈥 Alexander-McKinzie said. 鈥淭he law has to be punitive sometimes, but it doesn鈥檛 need to be debilitative. The law shouldn鈥檛 be a catalyst to extreme poverty or a barrier that locks people into a crippling cycle of economic destitution.鈥
That realization led him back to college at 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock to finish his undergraduate degree and then to Bowen for law school.
鈥淪o much of what I want to do is affected by how the constitution is interpreted,鈥 he explains. 鈥淏oth with the unsheltered community and as a gay man who lives in the south.鈥 Caleb sees the two topics as being elaborately intertwined. The LGBTQ+ community is disproportionately represented among those who lack shelter. For him, they are two parts of a larger issue.
Alexander-McKinzie is a past president of Bowen鈥檚 OutLaw Legal Society, having served in this role during his second year of law school. He decided not to serve a second term because he believes the group is stronger if they can provide leadership growth for first-year and second-year members. 鈥淚 ran for and was elected secretary, and I鈥檓 still very much involved with the organization.鈥
That involvement has led to one of Alexander-McKinzie’s favorite law school experiences. Due in part to the virtual meeting format required by Covid, OutLaw was able to host a discussion on proposed hate-crime legislation in Arkansas and how, at that time, Arkansas was one of three states that didn鈥檛 have any such legislation. Panelists including historians, human rights campaigners, constitutional law scholars, and a bipartisan group of Arkansas legislators. Attendees were able to give input to legislators about the legislation they were drafting.
In addition to his work with OutLaw, Alexander-McKinzie clerked at the Arkansas Municipal League this summer. He served as an inquiry clerk, fielding legal questions from cities/towns in Arkansas and researching answers to those questions. He also helped counsel draft and craft legislation and spoke with all levels of government about the impact of legislation.
鈥淚 loved helping the League further their mission of making sure Arkansas municipal bodies have a voice in legislation,鈥 Alexander-McKinzie said. 鈥淔or me, positive change starts with good policy.鈥 Over the past year, he also helped found and continues to serve on the board of directors of Arkansans for Stronger Communities, a non-profit organization advocating for and helping to craft legislation to change the landlord-tenant laws in Arkansas. The group鈥檚 efforts were influential in a piece of legislation that serves as a foundation for change in Arkansas landlord-tenant law. 鈥淲e are closer now than ever before in joining 49 other states who protect tenants with a functional Warranty of Habitability. If you want to make homelessness brief and rare, you start with affordable and safe housing options. I鈥檝e had people contact me for tents and sleeping bags because the structures they were renting were unsafe and unsound. They had to choose between their health and homelessness. That鈥檚 a crushing choice.鈥
He鈥檚 also still heavily involved with The Van. He drives to the unsheltered communities most weekends, taking them clothing, hygiene items, and camping supplies.
鈥淟aw students will sometimes see me in the park talking with community members who happen to be unsheltered,鈥 Alexander-McKinzie said, smiling. 鈥淭hey always look worried until I tell them, 鈥業t鈥檚 good. I know that guy. I was just taking him a pair of pants.鈥欌
In addition to his law school studies and his work, he and a panel of friends host a podcast鈥擲outhern Fried Geekery. The group of professionals talk about comics and graphic novels. It鈥檚 a life-long passion.
鈥淢y obsession started with superheroes, as most collectors do, but it grew from there, again as most do,鈥 he explains. 鈥淐omics are a story-telling medium. It鈥檚 not a genre–it encompasses all genres. It鈥檚 a different way of telling a story and presenting a theme that may, at times, be easier to understand. That doesn鈥檛 make it any less serious as a critique.鈥
鈥淲hen I met Roger, I was a Harley-riding, tattooed, construction worker. Now I鈥檓 a comic book nerd/law student who talks a lot about bell hooks,鈥 Caleb joked.
Alexander-McKinzie’s post-graduation plan is to stay in Little Rock. His husband has a career here as an RN. They met in 2011 and were married in 2016. In addition to Roger and their three dogs, the people The Van helps are here. The work is here.
鈥淚 want to stay local and help those people overcome extreme poverty and homelessness,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 want to leave LGBTQ kids who can鈥檛 leave the state behind. I don鈥檛 want to leave folks living outside. Renters need protections in my neighborhood. These are the people who inspired me to get this far, and I owe it to these folks to use the tools I鈥檝e been given here at home.鈥
鈥淚 don鈥檛 know if I can make a dent in it, but I鈥檓 certainly going to try.鈥