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Latest from HLS News Staff

  • Heather Gerken

    Gerken examines the use of ranking systems to improve elections

    September 29, 2005

    Professor Heather Gerken: Yesterday, the Election Assistance Commission (EAC) released the results of a national study of election practices. Created in the wake of the 2000 presidential election, the commission is charged with improving how elections are run. Unfortunately, Congress gave the new agency a modest mandate, little money, and less clout.

  • Alexandra Chirinos ’07

    Chayes Fellows go global to see the law in action

    September 27, 2005

    The following story is from the September 2005 issue of Harvard Law Today: This summer, while some classmates in New York and Boston drafted briefs or finalized memos in high-rise office buildings, the 28 Harvard Law students selected as 2005 Chayes Fellows encountered entirely different challenges.

  • Elena Kagan

    Webcast of Dean Kagan’s ‘state of the school’ address

    September 23, 2005

    Dean Elena Kagan gave her annual "state of the school" address in Ames Courtroom this week to mark the beginning of the academic year. Click here to watch an archived webcast of the address.

  • Philip B. Heymann

    Professor Heymann on the Patriot Act

    September 23, 2005

    A Boston Globe op-ed by HLS Professor Philip Heymann and Kennedy School lecturer Juliette Kayem -- and HLS graduate -- on congressional reauthorization of the Patriot Act.

  • Op-ed by Professor Dershowitz: A painful absence of balance

    September 23, 2005

    The following op-ed by Professor Alan Dershowitz, A painful absence of balance, originally appeared in The Times (UK) on Septeber 21, 2005: On the Day of Simon Wiesenthal’s death, Sir Iqbal Sacranie, the Secretary-General of the Muslim Council of Britain, could be found in The Guardian proposing the abolition of Holocaust Memorial Day because it is offensive to Muslims.

  • Professor Elizabeth Warren

    Professor Warren on bankruptcy and the middle class

    September 22, 2005

    On April 20, 2005, George W. Bush signed into law a bankruptcy bill that had been pending in Congress for eight years. More than just a giveaway to the credit-card companies, the bill was a moral judgment against the bankrupt.

  • HLS Professors file brief in Supreme Court case on military recruiting

    September 21, 2005

    At noon today, Professors Martha Minow and Laurence H. Tribe held a press conference on the steps of Langdell Hall, at which they released a friend-of-the-court brief arguing that the Solomon Amendment -- the 1994 law that allows the secretary of defense to block federal funds to universities that restrict military recruiters' access to students -- does not prevent Harvard from enforcing its nondiscrcmination policies.

  • Heather Gerken

    Gerken discusses compromise on the Voting Rights Act

    September 19, 2005

    This fall, Congress will begin debating whether to renew one of the most powerful, and controversial, civil rights laws ever passed: Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act (VRA). Section 5 requires certain state and local governments--mostly in the Deep South--to ask the federal government's permission before making any change, no matter how small, in the way they run elections.

  • Barack Obama

    Obama delivers keynote address at Celebration of Black Alumni

    September 16, 2005

    On Saturday, September 17, Sen. Barack Obama, a member of the class of 1991, will deliver a keynote address following his acceptance of the Harvard Law School Association Award. The event is part of this weekend's Celebration of Black Alumni and will be webcast live at approximately 12:30 p.m.

  • Mary Ann Glendon receives Evangelium Vitae Medal

    Professor Glendon examines the Court’s use of foreign law

    September 16, 2005

    Professor Mary Ann Glendon writes: At first glance, it is hard to see why these side-glances at what other countries do have provoked such alarm. True, the references have increased somewhat, but they remain rare, and no one suggests that the court has directly based any of its interpretations of the Constitution on foreign authority.

  • Celebration of Black Alumni 2000

    Celebration of Black Alumni begins this weekend

    September 15, 2005

    This weekend, Harvard Law School will hold its second Celebration of Black Alumni. Highlights of the three-day event include a keynote address by Sen. Barack Obama, a 1991 Harvard Law graduate, and speeches by Harvard President Lawrence Summers and Law School Dean Elena Kagan. Hundreds of alumni are expected to return to campus for the event.

  • Professor Charles Fried

    Fried to testify in Roberts hearings

    September 15, 2005

    Today, Harvard Law Professor Charles Fried will appear before the Senate Judiciary Committee to testify in support of chief justice nominee John Roberts, a member of the class of '79, regarding Roberts' qualifications for the position. In his service as the chair of the practitioners’ reading committee, Fried examined Roberts' previous decisions to evaluate Roberts for the Standing Committee on the Judiciary of the American Bar Association.

  • Charles Hamilton Houston

    Launch kicks off Houston Institute for Race and Justice

    September 14, 2005

    The Charles Hamilton Houston Institute for Race and Justice will hold its official launch at Harvard Law School on Thursday, September 15. Speeches and ceremonies will be webcast live.

  • Robert Clark

    Clark honored at University of Iowa legal symposium

    September 13, 2005

    The work of Professor Robert Clark, a corporate law specialist and the 10th dean of Harvard Law School, was the focus of a major symposium this past weekend at the University of Iowa College of Law. The nation's leading corporate law experts convened for two days of panel discussions and presentations that focused substantially on Clark's landmark treatise, "Corporate Law," which was first published in 1986.

  • John Roberts

    HLS Professors debate confirmation process

    September 12, 2005

    On Tuesday, September 13, three leading legal scholars from Harvard Law School will come together to discuss the Senate hearings of Supreme Court nominee John Roberts '79 and the role of the Senate in the judicial confirmation process. Professors Charles Fried, Alan Dershowitz and Richard Fallon will speak at the panel discussion sponsored by the HLS Federalist Society.

  • Professor David Barron

    Hearsay: Short takes from faculty op-eds

    September 12, 2005

    “People are rightly concerned that [the Supreme Court decision, in Kelo v. City of New London] will give cities license to take private homes just…

  • Professor Jed Shugerman

    Assistant Professor Jed Shugerman: Revisiting the Senate’s ‘nuclear’ option

    September 12, 2005

    The following op-ed by Assistant Professor Jed Shugerman, Revisiting the Senate's 'nuclear' option, originally appeared in The Boston Globe on September 12, 2005: A second opening on the Supreme Court raises the stakes for the Senate hearings and doubles the chances of the Senate going "nuclear": The Senate Democrats filibuster, the Republicans vote to change the rules for closing debate, and the Democrats grind the Senate to a halt.

  • Op-ed by Professor Alan Dershowitz: Lasting peace in the Middle East?

    September 9, 2005

    The following op-ed by Professor Alan Dershowitz, This time, peace may be real thing, originally appeared in the Chicago Tribune on September 9, 2005: There have been many false starts in establishing a two-state solution to the Arab-Palestinian-Israeli conflict, but this time all the basic elements appear to be in place.

  • William J. Stuntz

    Op-ed by Professor William Stuntz: The Anti-Theorists

    September 8, 2005

    George W. Bush has lost his favorite Supreme Court Justice. No, Antonin Scalia has not quietly resigned. (Does Scalia quietly do anything?) And yes, Bush does like to say that Scalia is his favorite Justice. But I have a sneaking suspicion his heart beats faster for William Rehnquist.

  • Op-ed by Professor Tribe: Gentleman of the Court

    September 7, 2005

    The following op-ed by Professor Laurence Tribe, Gentleman of the Court, originally appeared in The New York Times on September 6, 2005: In October 1971, the White House tapped Assistant Attorney General William H. Rehnquist to respond to my critique of someone at the top of its short list for one of the two vacancies created by the nearly simultaneous resignations of two justices.

  • In Memoriam – Fall 2005 Bulletin

    September 6, 2005

    1930-39 | 1940-49 | 1950-59 | 1960-69 | 1970-79 | 1980-1989 1930-1939 Robert F. Levin ’31-’32 of Lexington, Va., died June 24, 2004. Formerly of Newton, Mass., he spent…