User:Goodboy2024/Law collective

Article body
Since the 1999 Seattle WTO protests, there has been a small movement of activist law collectives. These groups are usually non-lawyer centered, run along anarchist principles (even if they do not explicitly identify as anarchist), and work as part of the movement for social justice. These law collectives are made up mostly or entirely of non-lawyers. They include a variety of non-governmental organizations (NGOs) such as Global Exchange, which battles corporate injustice through a social and environmental lens. Labor unions and environmentalists comprise a great majority of these activist law collectives.

Feedback from instructor
I'm not convinced this article is a great fit for our class, as you need to find places to add content that combines environment and social justice concerns. This might be possible if you built out the article more with examples of specific work undertaken by law collectives, and focused on where such work addressed the topics of our class. However, the resulting article wouldn't be very well balanced at representing the full array of work undertaken by law collectives. Please come chat with me in person.Saguaro23 (talk) 06:05, 14 March 2024 (UTC)