Law school honored by Center for Plain English

WMU-Cooley Law School Profs. Mark Cooney and Joe Kimble have been awarded the Center for Plain English’s ClearMark Award for their work revising the law school’s bylaws.  Cooney (left) accepted the award from Jeff Greer, board member, Center for Plain Language during an awards ceremony at the National Press Club in Washington D.C.

Western Michigan University Cooley Law School was honored recently at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C. as the Center for Plain Language awarded the school its ClearMark Award in the Legal category.

The school was recognized for its restyled bylaws, which were recently redrafted by Emeritus Prof. Joseph Kimble and Research & Writing Department Chair Mark Cooney.
Each May, the Center for Plain Language celebrates forward-thinking North American companies, governments and organizations with its ClearMark Awards.

The center sets a high standard for clarity and simplicity in the documents its judges evaluate.

The annual awards dinner brings together some of North America’s greatest plain-language champions, all devoted to improving public communication.

The center has held the ClearMark Awards since 2010. Previous winners include the American Bar Association, Aetna, AARP and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.

For the 2018 awards, the legal category was narrowed to three finalists, and WMU–Cooley was chosen over Anthem, Inc. and Health Literacy Media.

The judges commented that WMU–Cooley’s restyled bylaws represented “an outstanding version of what a legal document should be.”

“It should be far easier to use than typical bylaws, which in turn should make it easier for the organization to fulfill its mission,” they said.

Cooney chairs WMU-Cooley’s Research and Writing Department. He is editor-in-chief of The Scribes Journal of Legal Writing and has served as a plain-language consultant on the Michigan Supreme Court’s Model Criminal Jury Instructions Committee and the State Bar’s Standard Criminal Jury Instructions Committee.

Cooney’s book, Sketches on Legal Style, is a collection of his “Plain Language” columns from the Michigan Bar Journal.

His articles on legal writing have also appeared in The Scribes Journal, Student Lawyer, and TRIAL magazine.

Before teaching, Cooney spent 10 years in private practice and chaired the State Bar’s Appellate Practice Section.

Kimble is the longtime editor of the “Plain Language” column in the Michigan Bar Journal and the senior editor of The Scribes Journal of Legal Writing, published by Scribes (the American Society of Legal Writers).

Kimble has published dozens of articles on legal writing and written two acclaimed books — Lifting the Fog of Legalese: Essays on Plain Language and Writing for Dollars, Writing to Please: The Case for Plain Language in Business, Government, and Law.

Kimble joined WMU-Cooley in 1984. He is a past president of Clarity, an international organization promoting plain legal language in law, and a founding director of the Center for Plain Language, which rewards clear communication and shames “complex, confusing or just plain bad writing and the companies that produce them.”
 

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