Associate, Miami

Phone: 305-445-7801

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Thalia Rivet Camejo

Thalia Rivet Camejo is an Associate Attorney at the Miami office of Allen Norton & Blue. She represents public and private sector employers across diverse areas of employment and labor law.

Before joining Allen Norton & Blue, Thalia served as an Immigration Associate with a focus on employment-based immigration. Her responsibilities encompassed representing clients—specifically colleges, universities, and hospitals—with a variety of immigrant and nonimmigrant matters. She also has experience working with multinational corporations on matters related to nonimmigrant visas.

Thalia received her Juris Doctor, Cum laude, from the University of Miami School of Law in 2023, and her bachelor's degree in Political Science from the University of Central Florida in 2018.

While in law school, Thalia served as Vice Chair for the First-Generation Law Association and was the Student Writing Editor for the Inter-American Law Review. She also gained valuable experience working as a Fellow for the Health Rights Clinic, where she assisted low-income clients with immigration and social security matters.

Thalia’s academic achievements were recognized with a CALI award, acknowledging the highest grade in her class for Legal Communication and Research II. She also received a Dean’s Certificate of Achievement Award for her exceptional performance in the Health Rights Clinic.


  • Florida Bar (2023)
  • Dean’s Certificate of Achievement Award (2021)
  • Legal Communication and Research II CALI Award (2021)
  • Dean’s Merit Scholarship (2020 – 2023)

  • All Florida State Courts and Courts of Appeal

  • University of Miami School of Law (JD 2023, Cum laude)
  • University of Miami, Inter-American Law Review – Student Writing Editor
  • First-Generation Law Association – Vice-Chair
  • University of Central Florida (BA Political Science 2018)

  • Thalia Rivet Camejo, “Sanchez v. Mayorkas: Is This the End of Green Cards for Temporary Protected Status Holders?” University of Miami Inter-American Law Review, Vol. 54, Issue 1, Article 8, Page 205, 27 February 2023.