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  • Heymann, Harman, Leiter and Goldsmith

    Panelists discuss the laws of fighting terrorism

    September 2, 2008

    Experts on terrorism were on hand for a panel discussion titled “Dealing with Terrorism: What Congress and the President Should Do.” The panelists discussed what changes they think should be adopted to better deal with the legal issues that have become controversial in dealing with the war on terror, including interrogation techniques, detention facilities, surveillance, and torture.

  • Woman teaches in front of classroom

    A Curriculum of New Realities

    September 2, 2008

    At Harvard Law School, some new answers to the question, What do future lawyers need to know?

  • Battlegrounds

    September 2, 2008

    On executive power, war and anti-terrorism, scholars have a lot to say--and lawmakers are listening.

  • The new curriculum includes more clinical opportunities than HLS has ever offered

    September 2, 2008

    There are now 28 in-house clinics at HLS, enabling students to do fieldwork at home and abroad. Here are some examples, taking students inside inner cities and inner sanctums.

  • Neuman, taking Armstrong chair, advocates ‘global due process’

    September 2, 2008

    What constitutional rights, if any, do foreign nationals have when the United States acts against them outside its own borders? Professor Gerald Neuman ’80 addressed that question in a Dec. 2 lecture marking his appointment as the J. Sinclair Armstrong Professor of International, Foreign, and Comparative Law.

  • Steiker weighs in on recent Supreme Court execution stay

    September 2, 2008

    Professor Carol Steiker '86 is an expert in criminal law and capital punishment. She recently argued a death penalty case before the Supreme Court, winning her argument and overturning a Texas death sentence. Here, she responds to a question about a recent Supreme Court ruling.

  • Suk explores the unintended consequences of domestic violence laws

    September 2, 2008

    In a recent interview with Toby Stock, Dean of Admissions, Harvard Law School Assistant Professor Jeannie Suk discusses her article, "Criminal Law Comes Home," which examines how misdemeanor law regulates domestic violence.

  • HLS Student in Argentina

    For four HLS students, a summer of human rights work in Argentina

    September 2, 2008

    Four HLS students found themselves sitting across a table from Carlos Menem, president of Argentina from 1989 to 1999. It was their opportunity, said Ariella Shkolnik ’09, “to ask poignant, difficult questions” about his controversial administration, widely accused of corruption and indifference to human rights abuses.

  • John Matteson

    For John Matteson ’86, Biography Beckoned—and Proved to be Fertile

    September 1, 2008

    Louisa May Alcott once described a philosopher as “a man up in a balloon” tethered to the earth by his family. In his Pulitzer Prize-winning biography, “Eden’s Outcasts: The Story of Louisa May Alcott and Her Father” (Norton, 2007), John Matteson ’86 chronicles the tension and affection in that vertical relationship.

  • Susan Lytle Lipton LL.M. ’71

    A Fundamental Advantage

    September 1, 2008

    From new alumni to retirees, broad-based giving is the lifeblood of HLS.

  • Professor Charles Ogletree Jr. ’78

    Research with Impact

    September 1, 2008

    The visionaries who supported these programs can already see results Established by HLS Professor Charles J. Ogletree Jr. ’78 in 2005, the Charles Hamilton Houston Institute

  • George Leighton ’43

    Easing the Burden

    September 1, 2008

    For some benefactors, financial aid is the priority.

  • Nasredeen Abdulbari LL.M. ’08

    Pay It Forward

    September 1, 2008

    Financial aid is helping those who will help others.

  • Northwest Passage

    September 1, 2008

    A great building begins as a gleam in the eye of an architect. Getting it built may require the vision of a lawyer.

  • Dennis Langer ’83

    Prescription for Relief

    September 1, 2008

    When Dennis Langer ’83 heard about Harvard Law School’s new Public Service Initiative this year, he knew it was something he wanted to support.

  • Bernard Koteen ’40

    A New Deal for Public Service

    September 1, 2008

    Bernard Koteen ’40 grew up during the Great Depression and went to law school during the New Deal. “There was great emphasis by the Roosevelt administration on serving the public, so it was natural for many of my classmates and me to have that concern and begin our legal careers in public service,” said Koteen in a 2003 Bulletin interview.

  • Adam Szubin

    The Money Trail

    September 1, 2008

    There’s a saying: Do what you love, and the money will follow. For Adam Szubin ’99, it’s a little different: With some early help from a Heyman Fellowship, he’s been able to do what he loves—and follow the money.

  • A Growing Treasury of Public Servants

    September 1, 2008

    The law school’s investment in public service is paying dividends.

  • David Ardia LL.M. '07

    Infotopia!*

    September 1, 2008

    With a cluster of research programs, HLS is a collection of think tanks rolled into one

  • A Commander in Chief

    September 1, 2008

    In law school, Barack Obama ’91 already looked—and led—like a future president.

  • Recent Faculty Books – Fall 2008

    September 1, 2008

    “Security in Paraguay: Analysis and Responses in Comparative Perspective” (Harvard University Press, 2008) is based on two years of research by the HLS International…