Maybe when you’re in trouble, you have someone to call. A family member. A friend. Someone who knows the system, or knows someone who does. But a lot of people don’t have that. They’re navigating institutions — legal, civic, governmental — that weren’t really built with them in mind. And when no one’s paying attention, things get lost. They need an advocate. Someone to speak for them.

Corrie Gallien finds a balance between her occupation as a personal injury attorney at her Gallien Law firm and advocacy empowering women recovering from abusive relationships at the Corrie Gallien Collective
Corrie Gallien grew up in Opelousas. She studied criminal justice at UL, then went to law school at LSU — not because she always dreamed of being a lawyer, but because she wanted to help people, and the law turned out to be the sharpest tool for that.
She spent over thirteen years in the legal field. In 2024 she launched Gallien Law, a firm focused on personal injury and appellate work — including juvenile public defense and appeals for children in state care. Kids, in other words, who have no one else in their corner.
Corrie is also deaf, and a survivor of domestic abuse. Those experiences don’t sit in the background — they’re the engine. In 2025 she founded the Corrie Gallien Collective, a platform for advocacy, public speaking, writing, and consulting. She’s a published author, a Top Twenty Under Forty honoree, and a member of Leadership Lafayette.

Christiaan Mader hosts Out to Lunch Acadiana at Tsunami Sushi in downtown Lafayette
Advocacy can amplify voices or it can provide a voice to the voice-less. Like a building or neighborhood or sense of place. Lafayette has been building itself for decades — new subdivisions, new roads, new commercial strips. And in the rush to build new, it’s easy to lose what was already there. Once a building is gone, the story it carried goes with it.
Denise Lanclos has spent years making sure that doesn’t happen without a fight. Denise is a Lafayette native who spent her career in banking and finance, eventually serving as Director of Finance at the Cathedral of St. John. She became president of the Preservation Alliance of Lafayette in 2021 — a volunteer-run nonprofit founded in 1990 to advocate for the history and culture of this city.

Denise Lanclos, President of the Preservation Alliance of Lafayette, fights for “the historic preservation of beautiful treasures and buildings but also landscape and cultural”
The Alliance was born out of a fight. In 1986, residents organized to stop the demolition of the historic St. Mary’s Orphanage. They won — and that victory led the city to adopt its first historic preservation ordinance. Today, Lafayette has 140 properties on the historic registry, and the Preservation Alliance is the organization making sure they’re not quietly erased.

Denise Lanclos, Corrie Gallien, Christiaan Mader, Out to Lunch at Tsunami Sushi in downtown Lafayette
Out to Lunch Acadiana was recorded live over lunch at Tsunami Sushi in downtown Lafayette. Photos by Astor Morgan.




