Contract Review & Third-Party Agreements

Contract Review and Third-Party Agreements for Atlanta Nonprofits

Reducing Risk in Vendor, Grant and Partnership Relationships


Poorly drafted funding, service, lease, partnership and joint initiative agreements can expose Atlanta nonprofits to financial, operational and reputational risk. Contract language that appears routine at signing can later determine who bears responsibility when performance issues, funding disputes or compliance questions arise.


The Law Office of Cameron Hawkins provides both preventive and responsive solutions to contract challenges. Whether your organization is evaluating an agreement before execution or addressing concerns tied to an existing contract, structured legal review helps leadership understand exposure and protect the organization’s long-term interests.

Contract Challenges Nonprofits Commonly Encounter


  • Vendor agreements executed without meaningful negotiation
  • Grant contracts containing restrictive performance conditions or reporting obligations
  • Indemnification clauses shifting disproportionate liability to the nonprofit
  • Automatic renewal provisions that limit flexibility
  • Termination clauses that are unclear or overly restrictive
  • Scope-of-work disputes tied to ambiguous deliverables
  • Payment conflicts tied to performance benchmarks
  • Memoranda of understanding that lack enforceable terms
  • Partnership agreements that fail to allocate authority or liability clearly
  • Contract provisions that conflict with internal governance or compliance obligations


In some cases, leadership identifies these concerns during routine review or growth planning. In others, contract weaknesses become apparent only after a dispute arises. Careful contract evaluation supports risk management in either scenario.


What You Receive From Contract Review Services


Our contract review services are designed to provide clear, practical guidance rather than abstract commentary. Depending on the scope of engagement, services may include:

  • Line-by-line review of proposed or existing agreements
  • Written summaries identifying material risk provisions
  • Suggested revisions and redlined edits
  • Analysis of indemnification, limitation of liability and insurance clauses
  • Termination and renewal risk assessment
  • Alignment review between contract terms and regulatory or grant compliance obligations
  • Strategic negotiation guidance before execution
  • Evaluation of contractual exposure when a conflict has already emerged


Leadership should leave the review process with a clear understanding of obligations, risk allocation and potential consequences under the agreement.


Core Categories of Agreements Reviewed


Vendor and Service Provider Agreements

Service agreements frequently contain provisions that shift risk in subtle but significant ways. We evaluate:

  • Indemnification language and liability allocation
  • Insurance requirements
  • Performance standards and deliverable definitions
  • Limitation of liability clauses
  • Dispute resolution provisions


Clarifying these terms before signing reduces uncertainty and strengthens negotiation leverage.


Grant and Funding Agreements

Grant agreements often include detailed reporting, performance and compliance obligations. We review:

  • Restricted use of funds provisions
  • Clawback and repayment terms
  • Reporting deadlines and documentation requirements
  • Representations and warranties
  • Compliance conditions tied to federal or Georgia regulations


Understanding these provisions supports responsible fund management and reduces the risk of post-award disputes.


Leases and Facility Agreements

Facility agreements can create long-term operational exposure. We examine:

  • Maintenance and repair obligations
  • Default provisions
  • Termination rights
  • Escalation clauses
  • Personal guarantees, where applicable


Clear documentation of responsibility protects operational continuity.


Partnership Agreements and Memoranda of Understanding

Collaborative initiatives often depend on shared responsibility. Agreements should clearly define:

  • Allocation of authority between organizations
  • Financial responsibility
  • Intellectual property ownership
  • Public communications and branding rights
  • Liability distribution


Our reviews focus on eliminating ambiguity in partnership agreements to reduce the likelihood of disputes when projects evolve or funding shifts.


Risk Management and Dispute Support

Contract review plays an important role in both forward planning and issue resolution.


From a risk management perspective, nonprofits may seek review before signing significant agreements, during periods of growth or after leadership transitions. A broader portfolio review of existing agreements can also reveal patterns of risk allocation that warrant adjustment.


When a contract dispute has already developed, structured legal analysis helps leadership assess exposure, identify leverage points and determine available options. Reviewing the agreement in the context of performance history, correspondence and compliance obligations allows the organization to respond strategically.


Addressing contractual weaknesses after a dispute can also inform stronger drafting and negotiation practices moving forward.


A Litigation-Informed Approach to Contract Evaluation

The Law Office of Cameron Hawkins brings a civil litigation and liability defense background to contract review work. That experience informs how we assess contractual language.


When disputes reach mediation, arbitration or court, the precise wording of indemnification clauses, termination provisions and performance obligations often determines the outcome. Vague or inconsistent language can limit defenses and complicate resolution.


Our review process considers how contract provisions would be interpreted if formally challenged. This perspective supports clearer drafting, more balanced risk allocation and more defensible agreements.


Contracts shape the practical boundaries of your nonprofit’s relationships. Careful review before execution and thoughtful analysis when concerns arise can significantly reduce exposure.


If your Atlanta nonprofit is entering, renegotiating or addressing concerns within a third-party agreement, the Law Office of Cameron Hawkins can provide experienced outside counsel to help evaluate risk and strengthen your contractual position.

Let Our Experience Work For You

 Contact The Law Office of Cameron Hawkins today for more information and receive a free, no-obligation case revaluation.

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Let's Talk About How We Can Support Your Nonprofit's Mission

Schedule a Consultation