About the President


About the President

ILR President Lisa RickardLisa A. Rickard has served as president of the U.S. Chamber Institute for Legal Reform (ILR) since March 2003. She provides strategic leadership to ILR's comprehensive program aimed at changing the legal culture that has resulted in our nation's litigation explosion.

ILR's multifaceted campaign takes the fight for legal reform to legislators, the courts, and the public by engaging in legislative advocacy, litigation support, and voter education. Conducting seminal research to strengthen the case for reform and building strategic alliances are also cornerstones of ILR's mission to restore fairness to our nation's civil justice system.

Rickard has led multiple comprehensive reform campaigns at the state level, with marquee victories in Mississippi and Texas, both notorious trial bar strongholds. She has also directed numerous voter education initiatives in state supreme court and attorney general races, resulting in fairer and more balanced legal climates in those states. At the federal level, Rickard played a role in passage of the Class Action Fairness Act, the culmination of a five-year effort. In the international arena, Rickard is leading the Coalition to Curb Global Forum Shopping, which seeks to stop the importation of foreign lawsuits to U.S. courts and stem the export of U.S.-style litigation features to other countries.

Rickard has spent over 25 years as a public policy advocate, most recently as vice president, federal and state government affairs, for The Dow Chemical Company. Previously, she was senior vice president, federal and state government relations, for Ryder System, Inc.

Rickard was a partner in the Washington, DC, law firm of Akin, Gump, Strauss, Hauer & Feld where she represented corporate and public sector interests before Congress, the White House, and regulatory agencies. She also has worked in the offices of former Sens. Frank Murkowski (R-AK) and Richard Stone (D-FL).

Commentary

For arbitration's opponents, ensuring that consumers can go to court is not the end goal. It is actually the first step of a two-step dance at the plaintiffs' lawyer prom.

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ILR Research


101 Ways to Improve State Legal Systems

101 Ways to Improve State Legal SystemsILR has released a comprehensive compendium of legal reform options for implementation by state legislatures, which allows legal reform leaders to modify their approach based on the unique policy and political landscape of their state.

Read the report (pdf)

View additional research

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