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Latest from HLS News Staff

  • Courtroom of the Tribunals Dec. 10, 1945

    Conference probes Nuremberg's legacy for law and education

    November 14, 2005

    The International Military Tribunals at Nuremberg are widely regarded to have changed the course of history. The legacy of the trials for courts, social institutions and broader society was the focus of the two-day conference, "Pursuing Human Dignity: The Legacies of Nuremberg for International Law, Human Rights, and Education."

  • Philip B. Heymann

    Webcast: Dean’s Forum on executive power and the war on terrorism

    November 10, 2005

    On Wednesday, November 9, a panel of experts tackled the subject of executive power and the war on terrorism as part of Harvard Law School's latest Dean's Forum event moderated by Dean Elena Kagan.

  • Mary Ann Glendon receives Evangelium Vitae Medal

    Glendon to be honored at White House ceremony

    November 9, 2005

    Professor Mary Ann Glendon has been named a recipient of the National Humanities Medal. She will be presented with the award tomorrow at an Oval Office ceremony with President Bush. Glendon is among a small number of Americans to receive the humanities medal this year, which was revealed yesterday in conjunction with the announcement of the National Medal of Arts recipients.

  • Betty Murungi

    HLS Fellow wins distinguished peace advocate award

    November 8, 2005

    Betty Murungi, a fellow at the HLS Human Rights Program and an advocate for human rights in Africa, has been named this year's International Advocate for Peace by the Cardozo School of Law. The award honors contributions to justice, peace and conflict resolution. Previous recipients include former President Bill Clinton, Archbishop Desmond Tutu and former US Ambassador Richard Holbrooke.

  • Op-ed by Laurence Tribe: Alito’s world

    November 7, 2005

    The following op-ed by Professor Laurence Tribe, Alito's world, appeared in The Boston Globe on November 7, 2005: You can't help doing a double-take when you read Judge Samuel Alito's opinion holding Congress powerless to compel states to provide family medical leave to their employees.

  • Panel debates whether directors of companies should be personally liable

    November 3, 2005

    On Friday, Novemeber 4, The Program on Corporate Governance at HLS will host a panel discussion to debate personal liability for corporate directors. This question became a central one in the recent WorldCom and Enron cases, in which directors paid settlement fees out of their own pockets. Panelists will consider whether personal liability makes directors accountable, or whether it could deter directors from serving and make serving directors excessively defensive.

  • Ben Heineman

    Ben Heineman Appointed to Fellowships at Harvard University

    October 31, 2005

    Ben W. Heineman, Jr., GE's Senior Vice President for Law and Public Affairs, will become the first Distinguished Senior Fellow at Harvard Law School's Program on the Legal Profession, beginning in the spring semester. At the same time, he will become a Senior Fellow at the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs at Harvard's Kennedy School of Government.

  • Professor Elizabeth Warren

    Professor Warren on the new bankruptcy law

    October 25, 2005

    Professor Elizabeth Warren writes: Is there celebration in the halls of Citibank this week? Is MBNA uncorking the Champagne while Ford Motor Credit serves cake? Eleven years ago, these and other creditors pushed hard to re-elect sympathetic members of Congress who would enact a tougher bankruptcy law. Last Monday, the law they lobbied for went into effect.

  • Professor Charles Fried

    Op-ed by Professor Fried: What Miers must show

    October 23, 2005

    Professor Charles Fried writes: What is indispensable is that [Miers] be able to think lucidly and deeply about legal questions and express her thoughts in clear, pointed, understandable prose. A justice without those capabilities -- however generally intelligent, decent, and hardworking -- risks being a calamity for the court, the law, and the country.

  • Sadako Ogata and Professor Robert Mnookin

    Sadako Ogata comes to HLS to receive the 2005 Great Negotiator Award

    October 22, 2005

    Following the announcement on October 6 that the former United Nations high commissioner for refugees, Sadako Ogata, is the winner of the 2005 Great Negotiator Award, this week Ogata came to Harvard Law School to receive the award and speak to the HLS community.

  • Book by HLS lecturer Robert Bordone wins top honor

    October 20, 2005

    A new book co-edited by Harvard Law School lecturer Robert C. Bordone has received the top book award from the National Institute for Advanced Conflict Resolution.

  • Members of the TLPI clinic

    Report on 'trauma and learning' is based on HLS students' clinical work

    October 19, 2005

    The clinical casework of students in Harvard Law School's Trauma and Learning Policy Initiative is the foundation of a landmark new report called Helping Traumatized Children Learn.

  • Halley launches series on literature and connections to law

    October 18, 2005

    The HLS Program on Law and Social Thought is offering its annual series "Book Trouble" to engage readers with the legal, psychological and theoretical challenges raised by literature. This fall, the series will put artists and lecturers in discussion with students and faculty, including HLS Professors Gerald Frug and David Barron.

  • Newt Minow

    Newt Minow reflects on legal career from Cuban Missile Crisis to present

    October 11, 2005

    On Wednesday, October 5, Newt Minow spoke at Harvard Law School as the first in the "Great Lawyers" speakers series. Minow's career has included practice in both small and large law firms, government service and business. The conversation was moderated by Dean Elena Kagan and Professor Martha Minow, his daughter. An archived webcast of the event is now available.

  • Sadako Ogata

    Sadako Ogata named as the 2005 Great Negotiator

    October 7, 2005

    The Program on Negotiation at Harvard Law School today announced that the recipient of its 2005 Great Negotiator award is Sadako Ogata, the former United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees in the 1990s.

  • William J. Stuntz

    Stuntz says Bush ‘pulled a Truman’ by selecting Miers

    October 5, 2005

    The following essay, The Truman Show: In choosing Miers, Bush pulled a Truman, by Professor William Stuntz originally appeared in The New Republic Online on October 4, 2005: What kind of president picks both John Roberts and Harriet Miers? They look like the ultimate odd couple. Roberts is not a Bush crony, he has a résumé to die for, and everyone who knows him says he's unbelievably smart. Miers is more than a crony but certainly not less.

  • The Supreme Court

    Webcast: HLS faculty examine upcoming Supreme Court term

    October 4, 2005

    On the same day that President Bush nominated his second Supreme Court justice, members of the Harvard Law School faculty assembled in Langdell Hall to examine recent trends on the high Court and speculate about upcoming cases and the beginning of John Robert's tenure as chief justice.

  • Alex Wong '07

    HLS student gets a front-row seat for U.N. action

    October 3, 2005

    From the September 2005 issue of Harvard Law Today: Fifteen ambassadors took their seats at the round Security Council table. Two rows behind U.S. Ambassador Gerald Scott sat Alex Wong ’07, summer intern at the U.S. Mission to the United Nations.

  • Ames Courtroom, Harvard Law School

    High Court justices compare their roles

    September 30, 2005

    On Wednesday, September 28, Supreme Court Justices Stephen Breyer and Antonin Scalia were joined by their British counterparts for a wide-ranging panel discussion on the similarities and differences between the judicial systems in the U.S. and U.K.

  • Hal Scott

    Japanese and U.S. financial experts convene in Japan

    September 30, 2005

    On September 30, 2005, approximately 130 leaders of the financial systems of the United States and Japan will convene in Gotemba, Japan for discussions over three days on issues affecting the future of the global financial system.

  • John Roberts

    Harvard Law grad John Roberts confirmed as chief justice of the United States

    September 29, 2005

    Following a 78 to 22 confirmation vote by the U.S. Senate, today Harvard Law School graduate John Roberts became chief justice of the United States, the highest ranking position in the American judiciary.