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Since its
inception in 1958, the New Jersey State Bar Foundation
has been dedicated to carrying out the charitable and
educational endeavors of the organized bar in New Jersey,
specifically those of the New Jersey State Bar Association.
Through a variety of services, programs and publications,
the Foundation reaches out to everyone, from children
to senior citizens, to teach "law for laypersons."
In 1988, the Foundation expanded its public education
effort. It began with free seminars at the New Jersey
Law Center in New Brunswick and its high school mock
trial competition. Today, the Foundation has a program
that is unequaled and stands as a model for other law-related
organizations across the country.
The Foundation
reaches into the schools to teach children and teenagers
about the law through hands-on programs like Law Fair
and Law Adventure; the Vincent J. Apruzzese High School
Mock Trial Competition; Law-Related Education Conferences
for teachers; a Speakers Bureau; and Video Loan Library.
The State Bar Foundation also sponsors an extensive
program aimed at teaching students skills for resolving
conflicts peacefully and promoting tolerance and diversity.
This program offers Conflict Resolution and Peer Mediation
Guides with lesson plans, as well as training sessions
to help New Jersey educators teach their students how
to resolve conflicts without resorting to violence.
To further
promote understanding of the law, the Foundation launched
its legal newspaper for kids, The Legal Eagle, in the
fall of 1996. Published three times a year, the newspaper
has seen its readership grow to nearly 170,000 subscribers
in elementary, middle and high schools across the state.
The free newspaper is a resource for students and teachers
that helps stimulate discussions about the law and how
it impacts daily life.
Conferences
for senior citizens, the disabled, AIDS service providers,
teachers and drug counselors have also helped thousands
in New Jersey to better understand the law.
Free publications
available from the Foundation include Law Points for
Senior Citizens; Consumers Guide to New Jersey
Law; Legal Consequences of Substance Abuse; AIDS and
the Law in New Jersey; Disability Law Primer (fourth
edition); and pamphlets on domestic violence laws, as
well as bankruptcy. Some are available in Spanish, and
all are available in alternative formats for individuals
with disabilities.
The Foundations
public service programs are funded by the IOLTA Fund
of the Bar of New Jersey and are all offered free of
charge. For copies of materials or for more information
on any program or the Foundation in general, please
call 1-800-FREE LAW or visit its website at www.njsbf.com.
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