National Black Law Students Association
Logo of the National Black Law Students Association
|
Abbreviation
| NBLSA
|
---|
Formation
| 1968
; 56 years ago
(
1968
)
|
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Founder
| Algernon Johnson Cooper
|
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Founded at
| New York University Law School
|
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Type
| Organization
|
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Purpose
| To articulate and promote the needs and goals of black law students and effectuate change in the legal community
|
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Headquarters
| Washington, D.C.
|
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Region
| United States
|
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Membership
| 6000
|
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Affiliations
| National Bar Association
|
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Website
| Official website
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The
National Black Law Students Association
(
NBLSA
), founded in 1968,
[1]
[2]
is a nationwide organization formed to articulate and promote the needs and goals of black law students and effectuates change in the legal community. As the largest law student organization in the country
[3]
with over 6,000 members, NBLSA includes chapters or affiliates in six countries including the
Bahamas
,
Nigeria
, and
South Africa
. NBLSA encourages the development of talented, social conscious lawyers of tomorrow. NBLSA help start the Black Law Students Association of Canada (BLSAC), the National Latino/Latina Student Association (NLLSA), National Association of Law Students with Disabilities (NALSD), and the National Asian Pacific American Law Student Association (NAPALSA). The headquarters of NBLSA is located in
Washington, D.C.
Organized into six regions (Northeast, Mid-Atlantic, Southern, Mid-West, Rocky Mountain and Western Region)
[1]
the organization has over 200 chapters and is present in all but a few of the nation's accredited law schools, as well as unaccredited law schools. Each year, the organization holds an annual convention to engage in legal activism and while preparing new generations of black lawyers to "effectuate change." Additionally, the
Frederick Douglass
Moot Court
and
Thurgood Marshall
Mock Trial
Competitions are held during its Annual Convention.
In 1968,
Algernon Johnson Cooper
, former mayor of
Prichard, Alabama
, founded the first
Black American Law Students Association
at the
New York University Law School
.
[1]
[2]
In 1983, BALSA revised its name and the word "American" was deleted to encompass all blacks, including those not of American nationality. Later, the word "National" was added to reflect the organization's national expansion, which now includes representation in the law schools of forty-eight states and
Puerto Rico
.
The association has ties with the
National Bar Association
, the Council on Legal Education Opportunity, The National Black Alliance, and the National Black Leadership Roundtable.
At the fortieth anniversary convention of the NBLSA in
Detroit
Cooper, speaking on the origins of the organization, said:
[2]
We organized at NYU during the halcyon days of the late '60s, in the midst of riots, and our mission was contemplated, debated, discussed, agreed upon, refined and re-refined as only law students can do. But finally, we decided that our mission was to articulate and promote professional needs and goals of African American law students ...to initiate a change within the legal system that would make it more responsive to the needs of the African American community.
References
[
edit
]
- ^
a
b
c
Dunham, Mark A. (October 30, 2017).
"NBLSA National Chair's Mid-Year Message"
. National Black Law Students Association.
Archived
from the original on August 29, 2020
. Retrieved
August 29,
2020
.
- ^
a
b
c
Weaver, Kendall (February 1, 2016).
Ten Stars: The African American Journey of Gary Cooper?Marine General, Diplomat, Businessman, and Politician
. NewSouth Books. p. 118.
ISBN
9781603064149
.
At its fortieth anniversary convention, in Detroit, Jay reflected on its formation and its future: We organized at NYU during the halcyon days of the late '60s, in the midst of riots, and our mission was contemplated, debated, discussed, agreed upon, refined and re-refined as only law students can do. But finally we decided that our mission was to articulate and promots professional needs and goals of African American law students ...to initiate a change within the legal system that would make it more responsive to the needs of the African American community.
- ^
"Many of This Year's Competition Successes Were Unprecedented"
.
UB Law Forum
.
28
(2).
University at Buffalo School of Law
. Spring 2014
. Retrieved
August 29,
2020
.
The Douglass competition is a national appellate advocacy competition organized by the Nation Black Law Student Association, the largest law students organization in the United States.
External links
[
edit
]
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International
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National
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Other
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