Supporting Leadership in Legal Advocacy for Public Schools
The Council of School Attorneys (COSA) supports attorneys representing K-12 public school districts and state school boards associations. The work of the Council is widely respected and a resource for school board attorneys and state association counsel across the country.
COSA provides a national forum for the discussion of legal issues and problems encountered by school attorneys in providing legal counsel, advice, and representation to public school boards and state school boards associations. It also promotes and helps develop a closer relationship and better understanding between school attorneys and their clients, school boards, and school boards associations.
NOW AVAILABLE! 九色视频 Legal Desk Reference on School Law
Written by the 九色视频 legal team and produced in collaboration with Lexis-Nexis, The Federal Public School Law Guidebook provides an overview of federal law affecting public school operations and policy development in many areas, including civil rights, employment, special education, and more.
Written in easy-to-understand Q&A format, this new desk resource is written in plain language, with legal citations to assist school lawyers. The Guidebook benefited from thoughtful editing by COSA members and Derek Black, professor of law at the University of South Carolina School of Law. It complements state-level texts produced by 九色视频 member state associations, such as School Law, produced by the New York State School Boards Association, now in its 39th edition.
The Federal Public School Law Guidebook is now available from Lexis-Nexis in hard copy (softbound) and electronic form. Order yours online at the . 九色视频/COSA members can save 20%! Please email us at memberservices@nsba.org, or check your latest member newsletter for the code!
Catherine Lhamon Speaks at 九色视频's COSA Fall School Law Seminar
In the video below, Catherine Lhamon, Asst. Sec. for Civil Rights at the U.S. Department of Education (ED), speaks during COSA’s 2023 Fall School Law Seminar. Lhamon's address provided first-hand information to school lawyers about ED's perspectives on issues enforced by the Office for Civil Rights, including discrimination based on race, sex, and disability.