Ways to Become Involved in the Legal Community
Bar and professional associations, their practice area sections, and the American Inns of Court provide law students with resources, connections, and service opportunities that can be useful as they consider potential areas of practice and develop as professionals. They can help law students learned about different practice areas and help them demonstrate interest in a particular practice area. Pro bono and service opportunities can help law students develop their networks as well as learn and practice skills. Finally, social activities provide law students with connection-building opportunities and informal mentoring by lawyers.
Even associations, sections, and Inns of Court without formal student memberships often allow or welcome students at various events or activities. Contact the association, section, or Inn of Court for information, or check with a member to see if you can participate as their guest.
Local Bar Associations
: Student dues are $30.
: Student dues are $10.
- Complete the . Select "Law Student" as Contact Type
- - The Dallas bar has 30 sections covering numerous practice areas. Many will allow law students to attend their section meetings.
- Free for law students
(LGBT Bar Association)
- the African-American Bar Association of Dallas, Texas
For a complete listing of all local bar associations in Texas, click .
Student Bar Associations
:
Texas Bar Association Law Student Division: Cost is $15.
American Inns of Court
The is a national legal association of more than 24,000 federal, state and local judges, lawyers, law professors and law students in 350 chapters across the United States. The Inns promote ethics, civility, and professionalism through meetings, conversations, mentoring, and educational programs. Nine Inns are in Dallas/Fort Worth and in North and East Texas. Each Inn has young lawyer members (2-5 years out), barrister members (5-15 years’ experience) and benchers (generally, federal and state judges and more experienced lawyers). Four area Inns invite law students to become members for a year.
The William “Mac” Taylor Inn (named for a federal district judge and informally known as “the ÃÛÌÒ½´Inn”) is a generalist Inn for judges and trial lawyers. Each year, it invites a dozen or so ÃÛÌÒ½´and UNT law students who have completed 58 credit hours to become student members. It meets from 5:30-8:00 on the second Tuesday of the months of September-November, February, and April.
Traditionally, each of these monthly meetings includes cocktails, dinner, and a program. The benefit to students is to eat, drink, and network with area litigators and judges and to see and participate in the programs. Many past student members have thought highly enough of their experience to rejoin their Inn after they have entered practice.
Typically, Inns meet two to three hours once per month from September to June, with breaks over the holiday season. Meetings usually include a social/networking period, dinner, and an educational program. Informal mentoring occurs through the interaction between the student members and more senior members in the pupillage teams. Many Inns also conduct formal mentoring programs, where student members are paired or grouped with more senior attorneys and judges to address specific questions of practice management, ethical concerns, and professional expectations.
Each Inn of Court determines its own dues structure for student members. In many cases, the Inn covers all of the cost of student members, while other Inns may require student members to pay a small dues amount to have “some skin in the game.”
These are the Inns of Court located in the DFW area:
- (Fort Worth)
- (Sherman)
- (Collin County)
State Bar Associations
is a department of the State Bar of Texas. All licensed Texas lawyers 36 years old or younger are automatically members of TYLA. TYLA is commonly referred to as the “public service arm” of the State Bar of Texas. TYLA’s primary purposes are to facilitate the administration of justice, foster respect for the law, and advance the role of the legal profession in serving the public. Law students may join the for only $15 per year.
For a complete listing of all state bar associations, click .
National Bar Associations
provides free and premium ($25) student memberships to law students. Students are able to join a number of the ABA’s practice specialty sections as a part of their complimentary membership.
: No Cost to Join
Professional Associations
(DAYL): Law student dues are $25.
: Law Student Division Membership dues are $15.