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Student Spotlights

  • Cortlan Wickliff

    Cortlan Wickliff: Harvard Law student graduates at 22

    June 6, 2013

    When Harvard Law School graduate Cortlan Wickliff '13 donned his cap and gown, regalia his mother had to remind him to order, the Texas native was one of the youngest African-Americans ever to graduate from Harvard Law School.

  • Dean Martha Minow walking with graduates

    Harvard Law School celebrates 2013 Commencement

    May 31, 2013

    Harvard Law School graduation festivities began on Class Day, Wednesday, May 29, and continued through Commencement Day on Thursday, May 30.

  • HLS Class Day Ceremony

    Students honored at Class Day ceremony

    May 30, 2013

    A number of Harvard Law students received special awards during the 2013 Class Day exercises on May 29. The honored students were recognized for their outstanding leadership, citizenship, compassion and dedication to their studies and the profession.

  • Lena Silver portrait

    Lena Silver ’13 wins pro bono service award

    May 29, 2013

    Lena Silver ’13 is the winner of this year’s Andrew L. Kaufman Pro Bono Service Award, performing the highest number of pro bono service hours in the Class of 2013. During Silver’s time at Harvard Law School, she provided 2,270 hours of free legal services.

  • Students commissioned as JAG officers aboard USS Constitution

    May 28, 2013

    On May 14, several members of the Harvard Law School community came together aboard the U.S.S. Constitution as three Harvard Law School students swore oaths to "support and defend the Constitution of the United States" as part of their commission as officers in the United States Navy Judge Advocate General’s (JAG) Corps.

  • Students mediate Harassment Prevention Orders

    May 23, 2013

    Graduating HLS students help build a new court mediation program to meet demand for protection from harassment.

  • HLS Commencement

    2013 Commencement Roundup

    May 15, 2013

    The Law School’s Class Day program was held on Wednesday, May 29, on Holmes Field, in front of Langdell Library. This year’s Class Day speaker, author and legal analyst Jeffrey Toobin reflected on his time at the law school. Professor Benjamin I. Sachs, who was selected by the class of 2012 to receive the Sacks-Freund Teaching Award, delivered remarks at the ceremony, as did Isabel Lima, Office Manager at WilmerHale Legal Services, who was the recipient of the Suzanne L. Richardson Staff Appreciation Award. Several students were recognized for their outstanding leadership, citizenship, compassion and dedication to their studies and the profession.

  • Clinic students secure asylum for indigenous survivors of persecution in Guatemala

    May 1, 2013

    Last month, as an historic trial continued in Guatemala against a former dictator charged with the genocide of indigenous Mayans, Lauren Herman ’13—a student in the Harvard Immigration and Refugee Clinic (HIRC) —stood in court in Boston as a judge announced he was granting asylum to her Mayan client, who, with his family, had suffered persecution for decades before he came to the U.S. in 2009.

  • Harvard Law School Building

    A fellowship of public interest: Harvard Law Students receive support to work in public service

    April 26, 2013

    Each year, students at Harvard Law School receive a number of impressive fellowships and scholarships to work in the public sector and on research projects in foreign countries.

  • Jennifer Hillman '83 and judges with WTO Moot Court

    For second year in a row, Harvard Law School wins regional WTO moot court

    April 24, 2013

    For the second year in a row, a team of Harvard Law School students won the North American regional moot court competition on WTO law at the ELSA Moot Court Competition (EMC²). The second annual competition was held in San Jose, Costa Rica and was organized in cooperation with the Costa Rican Society of International Law.

  • Prison cell

    The Harvard Immigration Project: Fighting for the rights of immigrant detainees

    April 9, 2013

    Following its second victory, the Harvard Immigration Project’s (HIP) Bond Hearing Project continues its new campaign to provide free legal representation to detained immigrants seeking release from immigration custody.

  • Haben Girma

    Haben Girma ’13 named a White House Champion of Change (video)

    March 19, 2013

    Harvard Law School student Haben Girma ’13 was recently named a White House Champion of Change for her advocacy on behalf of deafblind individuals and her efforts in promoting educational excellence for African Americans.

  • Harvard Law students featured in Business Insider

    March 15, 2013

    Twenty-one students from Harvard Law School were profiled in the March 4 edition of Business Insider in an article that celebrates the extraordinary range of experiences and contributions of Harvard Law School students.

  • Michael F. Jacobson

    Food for thought: Panel discusses how labeling products could be improved

    March 13, 2013

    On March 8-9, the Harvard Food Law Society hosted “Forum on Food Labeling: Putting the Label on the Table,” a conference that brought together a host of authorities on food law and policy to explore the legal and policy aspects of food labeling and its effects on consumer knowledge, choice, and behavior.

  • The Chayes International Public Service Fellowship: snapshots from this summer

    March 12, 2013

    During the summer of 2012, hundreds of Harvard Law School J.D. and graduate students benefitted from the largest pool of guaranteed funding offered by a law school for the broadest range of public interest summer work. A select group of 26 students worked in 19 countries under the aegis of the Chayes International Public Service Fellowships, dedicated to the memory of Professor Abram Chayes, who taught at Harvard Law School for more than 40 years.

  • Annual International Party

    Cultural exchange: Graduate Program hosts annual international party

    March 5, 2013

    At the annual international party hosted by the Harvard Law School LL.M class of 2013, students, faculty, staff and family members filled the Harkness Commons in the Caspersen Student Center for a chance to immerse themselves in the cultures of their graduate student classmates, who hail from more than 70 countries.

  • Gillian Grossman ’14

    Grossman elected 127th president of the Harvard Law Review

    February 13, 2013

    The Harvard Law Review has elected Gillian Grossman ’14 as its 127th president. Grossman succeeds Conor Tochilin ’13.

  • Six from Harvard Law School awarded Skadden Fellowships

    January 9, 2013

    Six from Harvard Law School recently were chosen by the Skadden Foundation to receive two-year fellowships to support their work in public service. This year’s recipients include current students Haben Girma ’13, Hunter Landerholm ’13, Adam Meyers ’13 and Mara Sacks ’13, and recent graduates Robert Hodgson ’12 and Daniel Saver ’12.

  • Two from HLS on Forbes ’30 Under 30′ list

    December 19, 2012

    Harvard Law School's Joel Alicea ’13 and J.B. Tarter ’09 were recently named to Forbes 2012 “30 Under 30” list. The list acknowledges the high achievement of 30 individuals under age 30 in 15 categories. Both Alicea and Tarter, along with Dan Shoag, assistant professor of public policy at the Harvard Kennedy School, were featured in the Law and Policy category.

  • A Shared Vision: The growth of a friendship and a professional collaboration born at HLS

    December 6, 2012

    Marissa Vahlsing raised her hand in the first week of law school and spoke her mind. Right away, Ben Hoffman wanted to be her friend. Three years later they are off to work in Peru together, "the Siegfried and Roy of human rights law."

  • Ames Competition judges

    Souter, back on the bench: Retired justice presides over Ames competition at HLS

    November 19, 2012

    David Souter hung up his judge’s robes more than three years ago, after nearly two decades on the nation’s highest court. But on Thursday night, the retired Supreme Court justice seemed as sharp as ever as he directed his easygoing, often droll, always astute wit at the Harvard Law School students arguing before his bench during the final round of the 102nd Ames Moot Court Competition.