Join Women community events in Massachusetts celebrating your cultural heritage. Find cultural festivals, professional networking events, religious celebrations, educational workshops, fundraisers, and social gatherings that bring the Women community together. Stay connected with events that honor your traditions and create meaningful connections.
Working with a knowledgeable, motivated, and dependable attorney is key to the success of any legal dispute or transaction. Call KZ Law Offices at 781-343-1606 to schedule your consultation in our Brookline, Massachusetts law office.
As a solo practitioner and owner of the KZ Law Offices, Kat Shnayder provides legal representation and guidance in the area of immigration and real estate law. An immigrant from Russia, attorney Shnayder can appreciate the complexity and anxiety that comes with immigrating to another country. From the initial consultation to attending naturalization interview with clients, attorney Shnayder offers a range of legal services in all areas of immigration.
Prior to and while attending the Massachusetts School of Law, Kat Shnayder worked for a large law firm, which exclusively focused on protecting the investments of creditors. This invaluable experience offered her the opportunity to learn about real estate law and how it affected bank lenders and borrowers. Attorney Shnayder has over six years of experience in the foreclosure area of real estate law and can assist clients by explaining every step of the foreclosure process. She can also explain possible ways to avoid it.
Attorney Shnayder is fluent in Russian. She can assist and explain immigration and real estate law to clients in both Russian and English, translate legal documents, and accompany clients to the citizenship interview as an interpreter if allowed.
Kat Shnayder is a member of the American Immigration Lawyers Association, Massachusetts Bar Association, Starting Out Solo, and Massachusetts Association of Women Lawyers. In addition, attorney Shnayder serves as a commissioner to the Brookline Commission for the Arts.
Julia Grégoire is a French-American lawyer admitted to practice law in France (Paris) and the U.S. Her firm Avocat Grégoire is your legal bridge between France and the U.S.
Whether you are an American in Paris, a business looking to get established in France, or a French citizen seeking to move to the U.S., we stand ready to help you achieve your goals simply and efficiently.
As one of our clients, you will receive personalized, top-notch legal advice regarding your matter.
The primary goal of this establishment is to use fashion to encourage, empower and inspire positive self image and provide ongoing support to our community and support initiatives that support growth and resources to safe and healthy living. We will continue to work to generate awareness for feature causes.
The Northeastern Women's Law Caucus represents a vital community within Northeastern University's School of Law, located in Boston, Massachusetts, where student-led initiatives thrive in an environment built on collaboration and shared purpose. As a student organization, the caucus embodies the values of the law school itself—a commitment to practical legal education, social responsibility, and breaking down traditional competitive barriers that often isolate law students from one another. For more than five decades, Northeastern Law has cultivated a culture where students are encouraged to work together, take intellectual risks, and support each other's growth, creating the ideal foundation for affinity groups like the Women's Law Caucus to flourish. Members of the caucus connect with peers who share a commitment to advancing women's perspectives in law while navigating the complexities of legal education and professional development. The organization provides a space for mentorship, professional networking, and advocacy within a law school where written evaluations replace traditional grades, eliminating the competitive pressure that can fragment student communities. Faculty members at Northeastern Law include graduates from prestigious institutions like Harvard and Yale, many of whom are actively engaged in pro bono and policy work, offering students meaningful role models and mentors. The caucus operates within a school whose graduates have gone on to lead change in public interest organizations, legal services offices, and private practices committed to impact litigation. By fostering community among women law students in Boston, the Northeastern Women's Law Caucus contributes to a supportive ecosystem where members can develop their voices, build lasting professional relationships, and prepare to lead in a legal profession increasingly shaped by diverse perspectives and collaborative values.
If/When/How: Lawyering for Reproductive Justice is a student-led organization at Northeastern University in Boston, Massachusetts, where law students unite around a shared commitment to reproductive justice and legal advocacy. This organization embodies the values of community-centered lawyering, recognizing that reproductive justice extends beyond individual choice to encompass systemic equity and access for all communities.
Founded on principles of solidarity and social justice, If/When/How brings together students who believe that legal education should serve marginalized communities and advance reproductive autonomy. The organization creates space for students to explore how law can be a tool for justice while building relationships with communities most impacted by reproductive inequities. Operating from Northeastern's Boston campus, the group connects academic legal training with real-world advocacy and community engagement.
Members of If/When/How understand that reproductive justice requires lawyers who are grounded in community needs and committed to dismantling systemic barriers to reproductive access and autonomy. The organization fosters a culture of learning, solidarity, and action among law students who want to use their legal education to serve reproductive justice movements. Through collaborative work and mutual support, students develop both their legal skills and their understanding of how to center community voices in legal advocacy.
Based in Boston, MA, If/When/How represents a growing movement of legal professionals who recognize that reproductive justice is inseparable from racial justice, economic justice, and human rights. The organization demonstrates that legal education can be a pathway to meaningful community engagement and transformative advocacy that advances reproductive freedom and dignity for all people.