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Latest from HLS News Staff

  • William Howell

    William Howell wins Richardson Award

    May 25, 2011

    William Howell, student programs manager in the Dean of Students Office at Harvard Law School, received the Suzanne L. Richardson Staff Appreciation Award during Class Day exercises on May 25.

  • Professor Michael Klarman

    Klarman in Daedalus: Has the Court been a friend or foe to African Americans?

    May 23, 2011

    Kirkland and Ellis Professor of Law Michael J. Klarman has published an essay titled “Has the Supreme Court Been More a Friend or Foe to African Americans?” in a recent volume of Daedalus, the Journal of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. 

  • Noah Feldman portrait

    Feldman’s “Scorpions” Receives ABA’s Silver Gavel Award

    May 23, 2011

    The American Bar Association has selected HLS Professor Noah Feldman’s “Scorpions: The Battles and Triumphs of FDR's Great Supreme Court Justices” (Twelve, 2010) to receive its 2011 Silver Gavel Award for Books. The group biography of Felix Frankfurter LL.B. 1906, Robert Jackson, Hugo Black and William O. Douglas explores the justices’ contentious relationship and their effect on 20th century constitutional law.

  • Heyman Fellows profiled in Washington Post

    May 23, 2011

     Irene Chan ’02 and Michael Bahar ’02 were recently profiled in The Washington Post as part of a series on federal workers who are making a difference. 

  • Brig. Gen. Mark Martins ’90

    Rule of law in Afghanistan is critical to an enduring transition of governance, says HLS Medal of Freedom recipient Brig. Gen. Mark Martins ’90 (video)

    May 22, 2011

    Army Brigadier General Mark Martins ’90 accepted the Medal of Freedom, the highest honor conferred by Harvard Law School, and gave the inaugural Dean’s Distinguished Lecture on April 18 at HLS.

  • Heineman, Kagan and Slaughter

    Three from HLS named to American Philosophical Society

    May 19, 2011

    Harvard Law School Distinguished Senior Fellow Ben W. Heineman, Jr., Associate Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court Elena Kagan ’86 and Princeton University Professor Anne-Marie Slaughter '85 are among the new class of members elected to the American Philosophical Society this year.

  • HLS Assistant Professor I. Glenn Cohen and Dr. Eli Y. Adashi

    Cohen in the New England Journal of Medicine: ‘Human Embryonic Stem-Cell Research under Siege’

    May 19, 2011

    The United States cannot afford to allow ongoing legal ambiguities to compromise the vast potential of stem-cell research, yet the struggle over federal funding for research involving human embryonic stem cells may well be waged for years to come, write Harvard Law School Assistant Professor I. Glenn Cohen and Dr. Eli Y. Adashi in an article published by the New England Journal of Medicine on May 18.

  • HBS’s Mihir A. Desai accepts joint tenured professorship with HLS

    May 17, 2011

    Mihir A. Desai, who currently serves as the Mizuho Financial Group Professor of Finance, the Senior Associate Dean for Planning and University Affairs, and the Chair of Doctoral Programs at Harvard Business School, has accepted a joint appointment to the faculty of Harvard Law School as a tenured Professor of Law.

  • HLS Celebrating Earth Month

    HLS celebrates Earth Month at Harvard (slideshow)

    May 17, 2011

    In April, Harvard Law School participated in festivities commemorating Earth Month at Harvard, an inaugural initiative featuring university-wide events and activities to celebrate and raise awareness about environmental issues.  

  • Law students spend January in Lesotho

    May 16, 2011

    On an early morning in January, eight upper-year Harvard Law School students landed on the lone runway at the sleepy international airport in Lesotho where they were warmly welcomed by officials from the U.S. Embassy and the U.S. government’s Millennium Challenge Corporation (“MCC”), an innovative U.S. government foreign assistance agency.

  • Professor Randall L. Kennedy

    Kennedy in TNR: A right of all citizens

    May 12, 2011

    In light of the recent controversy over President Barack Obama’s birth certificate, Harvard Law School Professor Randall Kennedy espouses his views on the subject in the May 12 edition of The New Republic online.

  • Fernando Delgado

    Report documents role of state violence and corruption in organized crime in São Paulo

    May 11, 2011

    In 2006, a series of coordinated uprisings in 74 detention centers and attacks on police stations and public buildings left 43 state officials and hundreds of civilians dead and brought São Paulo—South America’s largest city and financial capital—to a standstill. Harvard Law School’s International Human Rights Clinic and the leading Brazilian human rights group Justiça Global have now released a comprehensive study of the attacks.

  • Zheng, Wamboldt, Ellis, George and Sommerville

    Harvard Mediation Program celebrates 30 years of students resolving conflicts

    May 11, 2011

    This year, the Harvard Mediation Program (HMP) (a Student Practice Organization) celebrates its 30th anniversary of training students and community volunteers to mediate disputes in small claims court and other settings.

  • Robert Greenwald appointed Clinical Professor of Law at Harvard

    May 9, 2011

    Robert Greenwald, director of Harvard Law School’s Health Law and Policy Clinic, has been promoted to full Clinical Professor of Law, Dean Martha Minow has announced.

  • Two HLS students named Presidential Public Service Fellows

    May 9, 2011

    Two HLS students, Alice Abrokwa ’12 and Sean Driscoll ’13, were recently selected as part of the inaugural group of ten Presidential Public Service Fellows. The awards are funded by an anonymous donor, and will go toward projects ranging from government and community service, to arts and technology- related initiatives.

  • Professor Alan Dershowitz

    Dershowitz: The photographs should be released

    May 9, 2011

    In an op-ed published in The Huffington Post on May 5, Harvard Law School professor Alan M. Dershowitz assessed the decision made by the Obama administration not to release photographs of Osama bin Laden’s dead body for public scrutiny. 

  • Professor Charles Fried and Professor Gregory Fried

    Fried in the Washington Post: Torture apologists stain triumph over bin Laden

    May 6, 2011

    In the Washington Post ‘Opinions’ section on May 5, Harvard Law School Professor Charles Fried and his son, Suffolk University Philosophy Department Chair Gregory Fried, discussed the killing of Osama bin Laden. The authors argued that torture apologists are undermining what the pair call a “great victory” for the U.S. by calling into question the circumstances under which bin Laden was felled during the firefight in his compound in Pakistan—a “risible” notion, by the authors’ standards.

  • Professor Yochai Benkler '94

    Benkler named Ford Foundation ‘Visionary’

    May 4, 2011

    Harvard Law School Professor Yochai Benkler ‘94 has received a Ford Foundation Visionaries Award, it was announced April 29. The award was created in recognition of the 75th Anniversary of the Ford Foundation to celebrate social innovators from a variety of fields.

  • Winners of 58th Williston Competition

    Winners of the 58th Williston Competition

    May 4, 2011

    The winners of Harvard Law School’s 58th annual Williston Competition, Harvard’s annual contract negotiation and drafting competition for first-year law students, were announced on April 18. 

  • Lecturer on Law and former national security adviser Juan Zarate ’97 on Osama Bin Laden’s Death: Are we safe?

    May 3, 2011

    HLS Lecturer on Law Juan Zarate ’97 was interviewed in the Washington Post today on national security threats after Osama bin Laden's death. From 2005 to 2009, Zarate served as the deputy assistant to the President and Deputy National Security Advisor for Combating Terrorism and was responsible for developing and implementing the U.S. Government’s counterterrorism strategy and policies related to transnational security threats.

  • Professor Randall L. Kennedy

    Kennedy in The New Republic: The case for early retirement

    May 2, 2011

    In an opinion piece published in The New Republic on April 28, Harvard Law School Professor Randall Kennedy takes the stance that Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg ’56-’58 and Stephen Breyer ’64 should retire soon, suggesting that a calculated and timely exit would ensure the Democratic selection of justices who share their judicial philosophies.