Working with a Lawyer
Your organization should establish some kind of relationship with a lawyer from early on. A lawyer can help you review documents, ensure that you have the appropriate documentation for your group and its activities, and inform you of risks and remedies.
Over the course of your organization's work, you may have occasion to do many things beyond support and education of and on behalf of your membership. You may have intellectual property to protect or technology to transfer. You may require people to sign waivers of liability for some of your activities. You will encounter contracts and other business documents that should be reviewed to ensure they protect your organization, its volunteers, and its members appropriately.
» Helping Your Membership Help Your Group
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Maintained by the Genetic Alliance.
The Interactive Guide to Advocacy Groups was written by Sharon Fontaine Terry and Caitlin Burke, with contributions from Genetic Alliance members. The Interactive Guide to Building Advocacy Groups is made available under a Creative Commons license. You may make and share copies of this work for noncommercial purposes without modifications and with this acknowledgement included in full. More information is available at About the Interactive Guide to Building Advocacy Groups.
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SEPTEMBER 2004: This is a preliminary installation of the Interactive Guide to Advocacy Groups. We need your feedback. Make comments on specific pages (you may see error messages, but comments should still post), or send email. Is something missing? Can we make it easier to navigate? This Guide will change regularly over the next few months as we incorporate changes and fine tune the site. Thank you!