Los Angeles County Bar Association

LACBA members are emailed electronic issues of the magazine, which each contain leadership messages, practice tips, and opportunities to earn continuing legal education credits.

has brought together law firms, foundations, corporations, donors and volunteers in an effort to provide equal access to legal services in the Los Angeles community.

LACBA Matters by Collen Hart and Lana Manganiello[4] AIDS Legal Services Project provides a lifeline to dignity and fundamental rights, including representation for estate planning, housing, healthcare access, privacy, debt relief, and immigration.

Source:[5] Since 1979, the Los Angeles County Bar Association, through the Attorney-Client Mediation and Arbitration Services Committee (ACMAS), has provided arbitration services pursuant to Business & Professions Code Section 6200 et seq (Business and Professions Code Sections 6200–6206 were enacted for the purpose of providing an alternative forum to the courts in order to resolve disputes between clients and their attorneys over the matter of the amount of fees charged).

Public Counsel is the largest pro bono law office in the U.S. Its principal role is matching volunteer private attorneys with indigent individuals who need legal services.

Written by attorney Kathleen Tuttle, the book Lawyers of Los Angeles:1950 to 2020 chronicles how the association and its members shaped laws and events locally, statewide, and nationally.

Initially driven by a cohesive but insular group of "Spring Street Lawyers," LACBA eventually expanded to all attorneys while grappling with issues of inclusion, equality, and access to justice.

[6] The museum has a listing of LACBA's past presidents, a biography of Clara Shortridge Foltz, and a chronicle of Los Angeles' legal history amongst other information.