Post Types
Article
-
Conference to Examine Climate Change Regulations
March 8, 2006
On March 10, Harvard Law School will convene leading academics and policymakers for a conference exploring U.S. regulation of greenhouse gas emissions. Titled New Prospects for Climate Change Regulation, the day-long event will feature a range of participants, including U.S. Sen. Jeff Bingaman, the ranking Democrat on the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee.
-
Clinical students advise Boston city planners
March 8, 2006
Today, the law school's Hale and Dorr Legal Services Center will host a workshop for the City of Boston’s Main Streets Program. BMS works to revitalize local commercial districts throughout Boston. Three students -- Duston Barton, 2L; Joyce Hsieh 3L; and Lerato Molefe, 3L -- will give presentations to program directors about legal issues related to non-profit federal and state compliance.
-
Ogletree receives Rosa Parks Award
March 6, 2006
Professor Charles Ogletree was recently named the first ever recipient of the Rosa Parks Award, given by the city of Boston. Mayor Thomas Menino presented the award as part of the city's African American Achievement Awards for black history month
-
This weekend, Harvard's International Law Journal will host its annual symposium, "Diffusion of Law in the 21st Century: Interaction and Influence." The conference will bring together scholars and practitioners to discuss the "globalization" of legal ideas and institutions in different areas of law.
-
Clinical program helps guide Massachusetts prison reform
March 2, 2006
Members of Harvard Law School's Prison Legal Assistance Project, a clinical program that represents state prisoners in a variety of proceedings, recently participated in rewriting Massachusetts law governing state prison discipline.
-
Associate Dean Scott Nichols to Conclude Service
March 1, 2006
After 20 years as Harvard Law School's Associate Dean for Development, Scott Nichols will conclude his service on April 30 to become Vice President for Development and Alumni Affairs at Boston University.
-
Human Rights Journal hosts conference on UN reform
February 24, 2006
This weekend, HLS's Human Rights Journal will host its annual conference, which will focus on UN reform and human rights. The event is particularly timely given that, this year, the UN is slated to undergo the biggest reforms since its creation. The event will take place on February 25, 2006 in Pound Hall on the HLS campus.
-
Dershowitz on the failure of the press
February 24, 2006
The following op-ed, co-written by Professor Alan Dershowitz, A Failure of the Press, appeared in The Washington Post on February 23, 2006: There was a time when the press was the strongest guardian of free expression in this democracy. Stories and celebrations of intrepid and courageous reporters are many within the press corps.
-
Legal Aid Bureau elects new leadership
February 23, 2006
The Harvard Legal Aid Bureau has elected a new board of directors, with Kimberly Harbin, 2L, taking the helm as president. Joining Harbin on the new board are 2Ls Jean Kosela, Julie Park, Paul Pineau, Humayun Khalid, Mira Edmonds, Vivian Chum, Libby Brown and Jonathon Bashford.
-
HLS Democrats visit nation's capital
February 22, 2006
Last weekend, a group of about 20 Harvard Law School Democrats traveled to Washington, D.C. to meet alumni and other lawyers with a variety of experience in government and politics.
-
Article by Palfrey and MacKinnon: Censorship Inc.
February 21, 2006
The following article by John Palfrey and Rebecca MacKinnon, Censorship Inc., was published in the February 27, 2006 issue of Newsweek: Executives of some of the world's most powerful companies squirmed in their seats last week as U.S. Rep. Tom Lantos (Democrat of California), a Holocaust survivor, lectured them about their role in helping China censor the Internet. "These companies tell us that they will change China," he told them. "But China has already changed them."
-
Students win national negotiation championship
February 14, 2006
Last weekend, third-year students Amar Mehta and Sabastian Niles took first place in the American Bar Association National Negotiation Championship. From a pool of 200 teams, Mehta and Niles were selected to represent the United States at the International Negotiation Competition in July.
-
Student wins award for overseas journalism
February 10, 2006
First-year student Elizabeth Barchas recently won the Overseas Press Club Foundation Scholarship, an award given to students who aspire to become foreign correspondents. From a pool of more than 175 applicants from 65 different schools, Barchas and twelve students were chosen by a panel of leading journalists.
-
Fisher and Shapiro win best book in negotiation
February 6, 2006
Professor Roger Fisher and Lecturer Daniel Shapiro were recently honored for their book "Beyond Reason" by the International Institute for Conflict Prevention and Resolution. The institute presented the authors with the book prize in a ceremony held in New York last month to recognize outstanding scholarship and practice in alternative dispute resolution.
-
HLS students spend winter break helping hurricane victims
February 3, 2006
This January, twenty-five Harvard Law School students volunteered a week of their winter break to provide free legal and humanitarian assistance to area residents and community organizations in Southeast Louisiana.
-
Kosovar student uses legal skills to help her war-torn homeland
January 26, 2006
It has been only a few minutes since Pranvera Recica LL.M. 2006 finished her corporations exam, and she suddenly realizes she is exhausted. Collapsing onto a chair at the Hark on a December afternoon, she explains that she's had no more than two to three hours of sleep each of the past few nights, and she is looking forward to getting back to her dorm room for a nap.
-
Mack urges new look at the history of civil rights lawyering
January 24, 2006
Assistant Professor Kenneth Mack is challenging conventional wisdom in his new article, "Rethinking Civil Rights Lawyering and Politics in the Era Before Brown," published in a recent issue of The Yale Law Journal.
-
Examining cyberlaw: A conversation with John Palfrey
January 19, 2006
John Palfrey '01, executive director of the Berkman Center for Internet and Society, was recently appointed clinical professor of law, a new position that recognizes his leadership in developing programs that give students real-world experience in cyberlaw litigation, client counseling, research and related issues. Here, Palfrey speaks with contributor Elaine McArdle about his work.
-
Professor Arthur von Mehren, 1922 – 2006
January 18, 2006
Arthur Taylor von Mehren, the Story Professor of Law Emeritus, died on January 16th at the age of 84. In addition to educating thousands of Harvard Law students over the course of a 50-year teaching career, von Mehren was a pioneer in comparative and international law. He helped to develop new thinking on a range of legal issues including international jurisdictions, commercial arbitration and comparative constitutional law.
-
Dershowitz on confusing the causes and effects of terrorism
January 17, 2006
The following op-ed by Professor Alan Dershowitz, "Terrorism: Confusing cause, effect," was published in The Boston Globe on January 16, 2006: Whatever anyone might think of the artistic merits of Steven Spielberg's new film ''Munich," no one should expect an accurate portrayal of historical events.
-
Bebchuk named to list of 100 most influential in finance
January 17, 2006
Lucian Bebchuk, director of HLS's Program on Corporate Governance, was named as one of this year's "100 most influential people in finance" by Treasury and Risk Management magazine. The list recognizes leaders in corporate finance, ranging from CEOs to regulators to academics.