Presidential Speaker Series unveiled by the ABA

American Bar Association President Mary Smith has announced the launch of the ABA Presidential Speaker Series, a collection of diverse virtual conversations with globally recognized figures.

“Law touches everything in society, and we are privileged to launch the new ABA Presidential Speaker Series with a stellar line-up of luminaries who every day lift their voices and chart the future with their work,” Smith said.

The guests in the series encapsulate Smith’s theme for her presidential term — “Lifting Our Voices, Charting the Future” — and will foster dialogue with world leaders, thought leaders, businesspeople, philanthropists, artists and other change-makers, according to the ABA.

Speakers include former U.S. Ambassador to NATO Ivo Daalder, labor rights icon Dolores Huerta, Academy Award-winning director Martin Scorsese, U.S. Secretary of the Interior Deb Haaland, and former Secretary of Homeland Security Jeh Charles Johnson and former federal judge J. Michael Luttig.

The online series kicks off with Daalder on Oct. 5 at 3 p.m. ET, with subsequent episodes releasing Thursdays at the same time.

Each installment will offer a fireside chat format that delves into the personal and professional journeys and pivotal moments of the speakers as well as discussions of national and global concerns, the ABA said.

“These conversations will foster civility and engender stimulating conversations,” Smith said.  “We hope these conversations will inspire our members, particularly young lawyers and law students and lead to ways that our members can continue to serve the profession and advance the rule of law.”

To introduce the series, the first four installments will be free to both ABA members and the public. Thereafter, the Presidential Speaker Series will continue to be free for ABA members but will include a charge for non-members.

Schedule of speakers

• Oct. 5 — Ivo H. Daalder, chief executive officer of the Chicago Council on Global Affairs and former U.S. ambassador to NATO, interviewed by Ertharin Cousin, CEO and founder, Food Systems for the Future and former U.S. ambassador to the U.N. Agencies for Food and Agriculture.•  

• Oct. 12 — Dolores Huerta, civil rights icon, American labor leader and activist who, with Cesar Chavez, is a co-founder of the United Farmworkers Association. For a special Hispanic Heritage Month program, Huerta will be interviewed by the Rev. Miguel Bustos, the Episcopal Church’s manager for Racial Reconciliation and Justice for the U.S. and Latin America and former executive director of the California Latino Civil Rights Network.

•  Oct. 19 — Martin Scorsese, Academy Award-winning director, producer and screenwriter and director of the new film, “Killers of the Flower Moon,” along with Chief Geoffrey Standing Bear, principal chief of the Osage Nation, interviewed by ABA President Mary Smith and Jimmy K. Goodman, president, American Bar Foundation, and attorney at Crowe & Dunlevy.  

• Nov.. 2 — Deb Haaland, U.S. Secretary of the Interior. For a special Native American Heritage Month program, Haaland will be featured with a special panel of Native American women “firsts” including:

— Abby Abinanti (Yurok), chief judge, Yurok Tribe and First Native American woman to pass the California Bar Exam

— Kimberly Teehee (Cherokee), first delegate-designate to the U.S. House of Representatives from the Cherokee Nation and former senior policy adviser for Native American affairs in the White House

— Stacy Leeds (Cherokee), Willard H. Pedrick Dean and Regents Professor of Law, Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law, and first Native American woman to serve as a law school dean.

The program will be followed by the release of the study by the ABA Commission on Women in the Profession in collaboration with the National Native American Bar Association tentatively titled “Excluded and Alone: Examining the Experiences of Native American Women in the Law and a Path Towards Equity.”

• Nov. 9 — “A.I. – The New Frontier” featuring a panel of special advisers to the ABA Task Force on the Law and Artificial Intelligence.         

•  Dec. 7 — The ABA Task Force for American Democracy co-chairs Jeh Charles Johnson, former secretary of Homeland Security, and former federal judge J. Michael Luttig, for a conversation with David French, New York Times opinion columnist.

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