https://tldrlegal.com/ is quite a useful resource for comparing the various FOSS licenses out there once you have some context
To get ahold of actual lawyers/advisors who help FOSS projects, you can reach out to the FSF, SFLC, and OSI at:
licensing@fsf.org
help@softwarefreedom.org
license-discuss@opensource.org
First, the standard disclaimer: I am not a lawyer, and this does not constitute legal or financial advice.
Generally, IMHO, it is a good idea to use FSF or OSI Approved Licenses (which can be found here https://www.gnu.org/licenses/licenses.html and here http://opensource.org/licenses/category)
The Free Software Foundation has a useful guide for choosing a license: https://www.gnu.org/licenses/license-recommendations.html
I often reference the Software Freedom Law Center's Legal Primer for both practical and academic purposes (highly recommended): https://www.softwarefreedom.org/resources/2008/foss-primer.html#x1-60002.2
https://tldrlegal.com/ is quite a useful resource for comparing the various FOSS licenses out there once you have some context
To get ahold of actual lawyers/advisors who help FOSS projects, you can reach out to the FSF, SFLC, and OSI at: licensing@fsf.org help@softwarefreedom.org license-discuss@opensource.org
Hope this helps, and happy hacking!