Latest from Aysha Bagchi ’17
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State of the Union?
July 15, 2022
"My hope is that workers bank power for when things aren’t as good and build unions to protect themselves," says Sharon Block.
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Access to history
December 9, 2020
The Harvard Law School Library's Nuremberg Trials Project has been used by students, academics, filmmakers and artists among others to support their work in the retelling and documentation of World War II and the atrocities committed during that time.
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HLS in Congress 2020
November 5, 2020
Harvard Law School graduates continue a long tradition of helping guide the nation’s affairs as members of Congress. On Nov. 3, 20 HLS alums faced the voters, either as sitting members of the House and Senate, or as challengers.
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How It All Adds Up
October 26, 2020
Lawrence Lessig discusses institutional threats to representative democracy.
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In a Q&A, Jason Harrow ’11, who argued before the Supreme Court in a case involving the electoral college and faithless electors, shares where he believes U.S. electoral reform should go from here.
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Easing the economic aftermath of a global pandemic
April 28, 2020
Mark Roe and John Coates recently spoke with Harvard Law Today about what could be done to lower the chances of a U.S. bankruptcy backlog and how other corporate governance challenges posed by the pandemic should be handled.
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Getting the Law of Wrongs Right
April 7, 2020
In “Recognizing Wrongs,” Goldberg and his co-author argue that much of the criticism of tort law comes from failing to appreciate its character and purposes.
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Letting Go
January 7, 2020
"Ours is an unforgiving age, an age of resentment," writes Martha Minow in "When Should Law Forgive?," a compassionate yet clear-eyed reexamination of law’s basic aims.