login-customizer domain was triggered too early. This is usually an indicator for some code in the plugin or theme running too early. Translations should be loaded at the init action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home1/natiopq9/public_html/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6131The post NAWL Celebrates the Twelfth Anniversary of its General Counsel Institute® appeared first on The National Law Forum.
]]>For twelve years, the General Counsel Institute (“GCI”) has provided an incomparable outlet for women who serve as in-house counsel across the country to discuss pertinent issues that affect their companies. Whether learning and discussing substantive legal matters or attending workshops that focus on professional development, GCI ensures that attendees are gaining insight and knowledge throughout the two-day conference.
But what really makes GCI unique is the inclusive atmosphere of the conference. Attendees range from General Counsel from Fortune 500 companies to in-house counsel for smaller boutique companies, all intermingling and providing valuable insight in a relaxed, friendly, and collaborative setting. The approachability of the speakers, as well as the attendees and organizers, encourages everyone to excitedly anticipate the conference each year.
The mission of National Association of Women Lawyers (“NAWL”) is to provide leadership, a collective voice, and essential resources to advance women in the legal profession and advocate for the equality of women under the law. NAWL was founded in 1899 by a group of eighteen (18) women lawyers in New York City and originally called The Women Lawyer’s Club (“Club”). In 1915, women’s suffrage became the first major project undertaken by the Club. Three-time Club President, Olive Scott Gabriel, argued for women’s voting rights across the country. Four years later, Congress passed the 19th Amendment to the United States Constitution, prohibiting any United States citizen from being denied the right to vote on the basis of sex. The Club’s membership mobilized to work for ratification by the states. It also worked consistently on social legislation – including child labor laws, minimum wage, divorce and marriage laws, the right for a woman to keep her name after marriage, and the right for women to serve on juries. In 1923, due to increasing nationwide membership, the Club became the National Association of Women Lawyers. That same year, it held its first national convention in Minneapolis with Chief Justice William Howard Taft.
In 1935, NAWL became one of the first national organizations to endorse the Equal Rights Amendment (“ERA”), first introduced to Congress in 1922. The ERA became one of NAWL’s highest priorities for the next several decades. In 1943, NAWL became an affiliated organization of the American Bar Association. It led the creation of opportunities for women to serve in the military and had more than 150 of its members serving in the Woman’s Army Corp., Women Accepted for Voluntary Emergency Service, and the Marine Corp.’s Women’s Reserve. In 1952,
NAWL drafted the Uniform Divorce Bill, calling it “the greatest project NAWL has ever undertaken.” In 1972, Congress passed the ERA and NAWL members embraced this victory by seeking ratification of the amendment by the states – a feat that would take until March 22, 1984 when Mississippi ratified it. In 1985, NAWL began granting membership to male applicants.
Two decades later, the then Immediate Past President of NAWL, Stephanie Scharf, now a partner at Scharf Banks Marmor LLC, founded the General Counsel Institute (“GCI”). Scharf targeted the meeting to senior corporate counsel who had the goal of advancing to the role of chief legal officer. She recognized the need for in-house attorneys to build top-tier professional and management skills in a supportive and interactive learning environment and to learn from experienced officers and directors about the points of pressure and success for general counsels. Together with NAWL President Lorraine Koc, then General Counsel and EEO Officer at Deb Shops, Inc. (now Senior Counsel at SugarHouse Casino) and NAWL President Elect, Cathy Fleming, then a partner at Edwards and Angell, LLP (now a partner at Fleming.Ruvoldt PPLC), Scharf quickly formed a planning committee which consisted of themselves, as a well as Carole Basri, then adjunct professor at University of Pennsylvania School of Law (now adjunct professor at Fordham University School of Law), Caroline K. Cheng, then Management Principal and Associate General Counsel at Deloitte LLP (now General Counsel at PricewaterhouseCooper LLP), Dorian Denburg, then Chief Rights-of-Way Counsel for BellSouth Corporation (now Executive Director- Senior Legal Counsel for AT&T Services, Inc.), Michelle Speller-Thurman, then a partner at Jenner & Block (now Division Counsel at Abbott Laboratories), and Betty-Lynn White (now an Adjunct and Area Chair for the University of Phoenix and Adjunct Professor at Albertus Magnus College). The Committee arranged plenary and workshop sessions to foster frank discussions about what it takes to be promoted and provide the means to improve skills and knowledge in a collegial atmosphere. They developed an innovative CLE program with opportunities to learn and network with other senior legal and business professionals and featured speakers Peter Harvey, then Attorney General of New Jersey, Catherine R. Kinney, then Co-Chief Operating Officer of the New York Stock Exchange, and Carol Robles-Román, Deputy Mayor, New York City. GCI met with rave reviews!
This year’s GCI will feature keynote speeches from accomplished General Counsel and business leaders who will focus on discussing their successful career paths, as well as providing advice and tips on how attendees can do the same. Keynote speakers will include:
Teresa Wynn Roseborough, Executive Vice President, General Counsel and Corporate Secretary, The Home Depot U.S.A., Inc.
Monique Svazlian Tallon, CEO & Founder, Highest Path Consulting
H. Gwen Marcus, Executive Vice President, General Counsel, Showtime Networks Inc.
Lauren Stiller Rikleen, President, Rikleen Institute for Strategic Leadership
Karen Hough, Founder & CEO, ImprovEdge, LLC
Through programs like GCI, NAWL has been empowering women in the legal profession and cultivating a diverse membership dedicated to equality, mutual support, and collective success.
For further information and to register for GCI 12, go to www.nawl.org/GCI12.
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]]>Lawyers are trained for many things, to represent clients in court, provide advice on legal matters and work hard to protect their clients’ interests. Most law schools, however, do not prepare lawyers to lead. Yet to succeed as in-house counsel, lawyers must be able to lead diverse teams and handle a variety of subject matters. At the National Association of Women Lawyers® (“NAWL”) Tenth Annual General Counsel Institute® (“GCI 10”) Strategic Leadership: Developing Legal Expertise and Skills to Enable and Empower Yourself and Others in the 21st Century on November 6th and 7th, 2014, eleven leaders will share inspiring stories of how they lead through change, adapt to the ever evolving regulatory, cyber, global and other matters that are challenging their corporations today. Additionally, they will share how they tailor their approaches to successfully tackle the tasks at hand.
In honor of the tenth anniversary of the General Counsel Institute®, ten of these eleven inspiring leaders are General Counsels. Brad Smith, General Counsel and Executive Vice President of Legal and Corporate Affairs, Microsoft Corporation, will discuss Top Leadership Traits Critical to Leading, Engaging and Motivating a Global Corporation as the lunch keynote speaker on Thursday, November 6th. Smith believes that a commitment to continual learning and to diversity and inclusion are two traits critical to successful leadership. He is committed to diversifying the legal profession to reflect the diversity of the United States as a whole. To that end, Smith serves as the Chair of the Leadership Council on Legal Diversity (LCLD), an organization of more than 200 corporate chief legal officers and law firm managing partners who share that vision. When asked about learning, developing and growing as a leader, Smith said that he makes it a priority to stretch himself in new ways every year. “I think it’s imperative that one keep growing to adapt to a changing world . . . the three best ways to learn are through reading, listening, and doing.” He added that . . . “the single best thing one can do is surround oneself at work with people who bring diverse experiences, backgrounds, and points of view to a topic.”
Sandra Leung, General Counsel and Corporate Secretary, Bristol-Myers Squibb Company, will be the keynote speaker at 9:00 a.m. on Friday, November 7th. She joined the company after leaving the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office where she was part of the original Special Victims Bureau. Leung rose through the ranks at Bristol-Myers Squibb Company, taking the helm during a crisis, and is now also responsible for Environment, Health & Safety, Corporate Security and Philanthropy. In her role, Leung has restructured the legal department to meet business objectives and reduced costs, which helped the company thrive in a challenging business and regulatory environment. She advises leaders to “. . . have great personal integrity and be someone people can trust” as well as “. . . be respectful of people, not just your superiors but everyone.” At GCI 10, Leung will be discussing what it takes to thrive in today’s regulatory environment.
Rebecca S. Halstead, CEO and Founder of STEADFAST Leadership, is Brigadier General, U.S. Army, Retired, and she will be inspiring GCI 10 attendees as the keynote speaker at lunch on November 7th. She served as a Commissioner on the President’s Military Leadership Diversity Commission 2009 – 2010 and is the first female graduate of West Point to be promoted to General Officer. Halstead is also the author of the book 24/7: The First Person You Must Lead is YOU in which she outlines five fundamental truths to support her definition of leadership. She founded STEADFAST Leadership to extend the lessons she learned throughout her life, including in the military, to future leaders. Halstead advises that “leadership is about the led . . . therefore one must understand who the people are, what the organization is about, what are the current challenges facing them, and how are they organized.”
In addition to the keynote speakers, eight General Counsels will conduct interactive workshops at GCI 10 where attendees will have the opportunity to earn CLE credit. These workshops include leading edge topics such as anti-bribery compliance and conducting global business in the cloud, as well as skills such as gaining executive presence to command attention and influence change. The General Counsels leading these workshops offer the following advice to emerging leaders as a prelude to the conference:
There’s still time to register for GCI 10, so come be inspired by these 11 leaders by going to Programs & Events at www.nawl.org!
About GCI 10: The General Counsel Institute is designed to increase the effectiveness of in-house women lawyers at the top tiers of their corporate law departments. This annual program targets in-house counsel who want to build professional and management skills to improve the functioning of their practice groups or legal departments and their interaction with C-suite executives with focus on pressure points, strategic decision-making, measurements of success for in-house counsel and what it takes to improve such skills. The General Counsel Institute is collegial and interactive and a terrific opportunity to talk and network with the presenters and professionals from Fortune 500 companies.
About NAWL: The National Association of Women Lawyers (“NAWL”) is a national voluntary legal professional organization devoted to the interests of women lawyers and women’s rights. Founded in 1899, long before most local and national bar associations admitted women, the Association is an educational forum and has an active voice for the concerns of women in the legal profession.
NAWL continues to support and advance the interests of women in and under the law and the social, political, and professional empowerment of women. Today, members of the Association represent all areas of legal expertise: public and private sectors; for-profit and not-for-profit; and large and small organizations. Through its programs and network, NAWL provides the tools for women in the profession to advance, prosper, and enrich the profession.
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