Credit Reporting Listening Session

NCLC and NACA are hosting online listening sessions in December and January for consumer advocates to inform educational, public policy, membership and judicial priorities for the coming year. Your recommendations…

Read More

NACA’s Business Development eCourse 101: Build a Successful Consumer Law Practice

Your success as a small law firm is just as dependent on your skills as a litigator as it is on your ability to successfully manage your small business. It’s…

Read More

Successfully Litigating Class Action Cases as Solo Practitioners

Solos, learn how you can make class action litigation more approachable and how to spot potential class-worthy claims in your case files.

Read More

Using AI to Improve Your Presentations

Join NACA’s Education Director, Rebecca Smolar and NCLC Senior Attorney Andrea Bopp Stark for a demonstration and conversation about how generative AI apps like Chat GPT and Gemini can give you ideas that you can use to improve your presentation.

Read More

Online Q&A Session with Ira on NACA’s Fellowship Programs

Ira Rheingold will provide details about NACA’s summer and 2-year consumer law fellowships and answer your questions about how you can bring a fellow to your firm.

Read More

Online Roundtable: Auto Fraud in Legal Aid Setting

Step into the forefront of auto fraud litigation with NACA’s exclusive online discussion!

Read More

Picking a Good Session Topic

This webinar and online conversation is geared towards attorneys who are interested in submitting a proposal for a session at the Consumer Rights Litigation Conference or submitting a session proposal for online learning through NACA and NCLC.

Read More

Legal Writing eCourse: Become a Better Legal Writer

Most lawyers live by their writing and most of us can become better writers. The goal of this course is to move you along that process. Please note that the…

Read More

Writing the Story of the Case

Skillful storytelling takes a brief from the law school writing course instruction of producing a “just the facts” soullessly objective piece of technical writing to the evocative ground of Atticus Finch moving the entire courtroom.

Read More