Get Involved
It is more important than ever to join the Chicago Council of Lawyers. Our democracy is under threat, and your membership helps provide the resources to protect it. Here is what you receive when you become a member of the Council:
- An opportunity to participate in the protection of our justice system and the Rule of Law.
- Access to research, reports, and people fighting to maintain our legal system.
- Free Ethics Training to meet your CLE requirements.
Make a Donation:
The Council is a 501(c)(6) organization. Make a non-charitable contribution to the Council to support its state judicial evaluations and its other efforts aimed at advancing justice.
Help grow the impact of this work:
- Share this page link or this graphic with colleagues, friends, and community members who may be interested in getting involved.
- Follow along on our social media channels and help amplify our initiatives by sharing posts, events, and updates with your network:
Increased awareness and participation strengthen our collective voice and advance accountability and justice.
Learn more about our committees below, and email ccl@chicagocouncil.org about your interest in joining a committee or supporting a program so you can stay informed about meetings, agendas, and opportunities. We welcome your active engagement!
I have been a member of the Chicago Council of Lawyers for almost as long as I have been a lawyer. I’m privileged to know some of the people who were present for the Council’s founding in 1969, and to be part of what they started and have sustained for more than 50 years. Participating in the Council’s work has consistently given me the feeling of being on the correct side of history. Our work has improved the quality and performance of the courts, and the public corruption we oppose no longer feels like “just a fact of life” in Chicago. Other bar associations exist for the benefit of their own members. This one exists for the public good.
Bob Slobig
The Chicago Council of Lawyers, Chicago’s public interest bar association, brings lawyers together not to advance professional self-interest, but to strengthen the justice system by insisting that it honor the principles that animate constitutional governance: fairness, human dignity, personal autonomy, compassion, and fidelity to truth. At a time when policies of the Trump Administration repeatedly transgress those principles, the Council’s independent voice is more important than ever.
Robert Lehrer








