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  • Professor Charles Fried and Cliff Sloan '84

    Fried in NYT: Free Speech Worth Paying For

    March 28, 2011

    In a New York Times op-ed about the challenge to Arizona’s public financing scheme currently pending in the Supreme Court, Harvard Law School Professor Charles Fried and co-author Cliff Sloan '84 write: “The [Arizona] law simply ensures that, when a candidate relying on private money speaks, the publicly financed candidate has the money to answer.” The op-ed—“Free Speech Worth Paying For”—appeared in the March 26, 2011 edition of The New York Times.

  • Gabriella Blum

    Blum gains tenure as professor of law at Harvard

    March 25, 2011

    Following a vote of the Harvard Law School faculty, Gabriella Blum LL.M. '01 S.J.D. '03, a specialist in the laws of war and conflict resolution, has been promoted from assistant professor to professor of law—a tenured faculty position.

  • William J. Stuntz

    NYT: An editorial appreciation of William Stuntz, 1958-2011

    March 25, 2011

    The New York Times published an editorial appreciation of the late William J. Stuntz of the Harvard Law School faculty, on March 23.

  • Jack Goldsmith on American Institutions and the Trump Presidency

    Goldsmith in Slate: The president’s campaign against Libya is constitutional

    March 24, 2011

    In a recent op-ed in Slate, Professor Jack Goldsmith makes the case for why President Obama's campaign of air and sea strikes against Libya is constitutional.  Goldsmith says that while he agrees with "many of the arguments from critics of the intervention that  President Obama acted imprudently in committing American forces to a conflict with an ill-defined national security justification,"  he does not believe that the military action is unconstitutional. Goldsmith's op-ed, "War Power," appeared in the March 21, 2011 edition of Slate. A former assistant attorney general in the Bush Administration, Goldsmith is the author of "The Terror Presidency: Law and Judgement Inside the Bush Administration" (New York : W.W. Norton & Company 2007).

  • Professor Hal Scott

    PIFS hosts symposium on building 21st century financial system

    March 24, 2011

    Harvard Law School Professor Hal Scott’s Program on International Financial Systems is hosting the 9th annual “Symposium on Building the Financial System of the Twenty-first Century: An Agenda for Europe and the United States” this weekend in Hampshire, England.  Co-hosted by the Centre for European Policy Studies, the event will gather more than 100 senior executives and government officials from the financial industry, policymaking arenas, law, and academia.  

  • Professor Jody Freeman LL.M. ’91 S.J.D. ’95

    Freeman urges coordination of agencies in shared regulatory spaces

    March 23, 2011

    “In his State of the Union speech last month, President Obama got one of his biggest laughs when he said that there are twelve different agencies that deal with exports, and at least five that deal with housing policy. Then there is my favorite example: the interior department is in charge of salmon while they’re in fresh water, but the commerce department handles them in saltwater. ‘I hear it gets even more complicated,’ and here he smirked, ‘once they’re smoked.’ All I could think was, this guy is stealing my chair talk!” With these words, Archibald Cox Professor of Law Jody Freeman L.L.M. ’91 introduced her lecture “Coordinating Agencies in Shared Regulatory Space,” in which she spoke about the problem of wasteful duplication in government agencies.

  • Professor John Palfrey '01

    Palfrey named one of Library Journal’s 2011 Movers and Shakers

    March 22, 2011

    On March 14, the Library Journal announced 50 new inductees to their Movers & Shakers list, including John Palfrey ’01. Movers & Shakers is a distinguished annual award given to those who are shaping the future of libraries and communities across the United States.

  • Jon Hanson and Adam Benforado '05

    The Project on Law & Mind Sciences hosts “The Psychology of Inequality” (video)

    March 22, 2011

    A conference last month at HLS, “The Psychology of Inequality,” presented by the Project on Law & Mind Sciences (PLMS), brought together scholars, law students, and others to examine inequality from the standpoint of the latest research in social science, health science, and mind science, and to reflect on the implications of their findings for law.

  • Professor Laurence H. Tribe

    Tribe receives doctorate from Mexico’s National Institute of Criminal Science

    March 22, 2011

    Harvard Law School Professor Laurence H. Tribe ’66 will receive an honorary doctorate on March 29 from Mexico’s Instituto Nacional de Ciencias Penales (INACIPE), or National Institute of Criminal Science. He will be the first American to receive the annual “honoris causa” doctorate since its inception in 1998.

  • Brishen Rogers and Professor Joseph Singer speaking at a conference

    HLS hosts “Local 1330 v. U.S. Steel” (video)

    March 18, 2011

    On February 25, Unbound: Harvard Journal of the Legal Left presented “Local 1330 v. U.S. Steel: 30 Years Later.” Conference organizers chose to focus on Local 1330 because the case demonstrates that workers can be treated as collateral damage in the corporate quest for greater profits. Co-moderator Harris Freeman, Western New England College of Law professor, said that its lessons are particularly relevant today as labor unions and fundamental workers’ rights are being challenged in Wisconsin and face similar risks in other states. The conference was also moderated by Temple University Beasley School of Law professor Brishen Rogers and SEIU Law Fellow Lela Klein.

  • Jacob Gersen will join the Harvard Law School faculty

    March 16, 2011

    Jacob E. Gersen, a leading expert in administrative law, legislation and constitutional theory, will join the Harvard Law School faculty as a tenured Professor of Law this summer. He is currently on the faculty of the University of Chicago Law School, where he teaches environmental law, administrative law, legislation, executive branch design and torts.

  • Professor William J. Stuntz

    William Stuntz [1958-2011]: An examined life of thoughtfulness and grace

    March 15, 2011

    William Stuntz, a renowned scholar of criminal justice at Harvard Law School,  an evangelical Christian and a teacher much beloved by students and colleagues, died March 15 after a long battle with cancer.

  • Oren Bar-Gill LL.M. and Jeanne C. Fromer

    Bar-Gill, Fromer honored with American Law Institute award

    March 15, 2011

    In February, the American Law Institute conferred its new award, the Young Scholars Medal, on Oren Bar-Gill LL.M. ’01 S.J.D. ’05 and Jeanne C. Fromer ’02. The award was created to “call attention to academic work that is practical, focused on the real-world and can influence law for the better.”

  • Professor Robert Sitkoff

    Sitkoff named to drafting committee for Uniform Act on Powers of Appointment

    March 14, 2011

    The Uniform Law Commission has formed a new drafting committee to prepare a Uniform Act on Powers of Appointment. Robert H. Sitkoff, the John L. Gray Professor of Law at Harvard Law School, has been named as a member of the drafting committee. An expert in trusts and estates, Sitkoff serves under gubernatorial appointment as a Uniform Law Commissioner from Massachusetts.

  • Professor Yochai Benkler '94

    Benkler argues against prosecution of WikiLeaks, detailing government and news media "overreaction"

    March 14, 2011

    Harvard Law Professor Yochai Benkler ’94 has released an article detailing U.S. government and news media censorship of WikiLeaks after the organization released the Afghan War Diary, the Iraq War Logs, and U.S. State department diplomatic cables in 2010. Among his key conclusions: The government overstated and overreacted to the WikiLeaks documents, and the mainstream news media followed suit by engaging in self-censorship. Benkler argues further that there is no sound Constitutional basis for a criminal prosecution of WikiLeaks or its leader, Julian Assange.

  • Paul Hoffman

    The future of Alien Tort Statute litigation: a talk by Paul Hoffman

    March 11, 2011

    In a Mar. 8 talk sponsored by the Human Rights Program at Harvard Law School, Paul Hoffman, a leading litigator of claims brought under the Alien Tort Statute, offered a look at the history of lawsuits against corporations for their complicity in human rights violations—and a glimpse of some possible future developments.

  • Professor John Palfrey '01

    The Economist: Palfrey wins debate on the internet and democracy

    March 10, 2011

    Professor John G. Palfrey ’01 was declared the winner of an interactive online debate on Internet democracy, hosted by The Economist from Feb. 23 to March 4.

  • Hanamura, Kuo, Moua, Chun

    Asian Pacific American Law Students Association hosts Pathways to Progress conference

    March 9, 2011

    The Harvard Law School Asian Pacific American Law Students Association hosted the 17th Annual National Asian Pacific American Conference on Law and Public Policy on February 25-26, 2011 with the assistance of the Harvard Kennedy School Asian American Policy Review.

  • Professor Jonathan Zittrain '95

    Zittrain on American Public Media’s Marketplace Tech Report: Does the Internet have an off switch? (audio)

    March 9, 2011

    Harvard Law School Professor Jonathan Zittrain appeared on the Mar. 9 edition of American Public Media’s Marketplace Tech Report to discuss the Cybersecurity and Internet Freedom Act of 2011, introduced last year by Senators Joe Lieberman, Susan Collins, and Thomas Carper.

  • U.S. News

    Harvard Law School ranked first by U.S. News & World Report survey of law firm recruiters

    March 8, 2011

    Harvard Law School has been rated number one in the first-ever ranking of best law schools based on a survey of hiring partners and recruiters at the country's top law firms, U.S. News and World Report announced March 7.

  • McConnell at HLS: What would Hamilton do?

    McConnell at HLS: What would Hamilton do?

    March 7, 2011

    Giving the biennial Vaughan Lecture at Harvard Law School, former federal appeals court judge Michael McConnell contemplated the question "What would Hamilton do?"