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  • Austin Hall

    Mack, Rubenstein elected members of the American Law Institute

    November 23, 2016

    The American Law Institute has elected HLS Professors Kenneth Mack ‘91 and William Rubenstein ’86 as members.

  • Illustration of a syringe with a Greek column for the cylinder

    Regulated to Death

    November 22, 2016

    In their latest collaboration, Professor Carol Steiker ’86 and her brother, Jordan Steiker ’88, a law professor at the University of Texas, have co-written a new book, “Courting Death: The Supreme Court and Capital Punishment,” in which they argue that the Court has failed in its efforts to regulate the death penalty since Gregg v. Georgia, its 1976 decision that allowed capital punishment to resume.

  • Portrait of Noah Feldman

    Noah Feldman on HLS’s new Program on Jewish and Israeli Law

    November 21, 2016

    Noah Feldman, director of the newly-established Julis-Rabinowitz Program in Jewish and Israeli Law recently spoke with Harvard Law Today about the scope of Jewish law, his aspirations for the program, and his own background in the subject.

  • Harvard law school building lit up at night

    Fair Punishment Project’s new Legal Advisory Council issues brief on sentences for juveniles

    November 21, 2016

    The HLS Fair Punishment Project’s Legal Advisory Council has issued an issue brief arguing that a sentencer may impose a life without parole sentence upon a juvenile only after concluding that the child is “the rare juvenile offender who exhibits such irretrievable depravity that rehabilitation is impossible.”

  • Mary Robinson

    Another ‘Angry Granny’ on Climate Justice

    November 18, 2016

    In a recent conversation at HLS with Dean Martha Minow, Mary Robinson, former president of Ireland and U.N. special envoy on El Niño and climate change, told the story of how she came to be an “Angry Granny” on the topic of climate change, starting with her discussions with people in the most deeply affected communities.

  • Crystal Yang

    Student exhibit shines a light on diversity in the law

    November 17, 2016

    A photo exhibit featuring portraits of legal scholars who represent traditionally marginalized voices will be displayed in Harvard Law School’s Wasserstein Hall from Nov. 17-22.

  • Jody Freeman

    Freeman on what’s next for climate change policy

    November 17, 2016

    Regulations to fight climate change likely will be casualties of the incoming Trump administration, but environmental experts taking stock of the changing American political landscape said that work in the field will continue elsewhere and that a broad-based rollback of U.S. environmental protection will prove easier said than done.

  • Action shot of Ronde Barber, Roy Williams and Jeremiah Trotter tackling Ladainian Tomlinson

    New Harvard report addresses legal and ethical factors affecting players’ health

    November 17, 2016

    The Football Players Health Study at Harvard University today released a set of legal and ethical recommendations to address a series of structural factors that affect NFL player health. The Football Players Health Study is a research initiative composed of several ongoing studies examining the health and wellbeing of NFL players.

  • William E. Johns ’67: 1942-2016

    November 16, 2016

    My good friend Bill Johns, Class of 1967, died of pancreatic cancer on March 24, 2016. He was 73, but always seemed much younger and…

  • Rebecca Tushnet

    Rebecca Tushnet joins Harvard Law faculty as Professor of First Amendment Law

    November 14, 2016

    Rebecca Tushnet, a leading First Amendment scholar, will join the faculty of Harvard Law School as the inaugural Frank Stanton Professor of First Amendment Law.

  • Kristin Fleschner posing with her guide dog, Zoe, a golden Lab.

    Blind Ambition for Universal Accessibility: A screening and discussion with Kristin Fleschner

    November 14, 2016

    In October, Kristin Fleschner ’14 returned to the Harvard Law campus to share with current students her work in disability rights and her experiences as a blind lawyer. Her talk was followed by a showing of “Blind Ambition,” a documentary that she produced as a 2L with the support of the Dean of Students Office.

  • Letters to the Editor: Fall 2016

    November 14, 2016

    How will developing technologies affect human values? Elaine McArdle’s “The New Age of Surveillance” describes how the Internet of Things (IoT) has created a hot legal…

  • Jody Freeman

    2016 Election implications for climate change regulation: Not as bad as it seems?

    November 10, 2016

    An op-ed by Jody Freeman: The stunning results of the 2016 election have prompted headlines suggesting that Trump will, with the help of the Republican Congress, dramatically reverse the Obama legacy on climate, energy and the environment. But how realistic is this threat? The short answer is: the picture is significantly more complicated, and markedly less bleak, than the headlines suggest.

  • Election 2016: A look back, the road ahead

    November 9, 2016

    Harvard Law Today presents a recap of the 2016 election season in images, words, and photos.

  • A student during celebration holding up a president mask

    Gallery: HLS gathers for Election Day 2016

    November 9, 2016

    Students, faculty, and guests entering Harvard Law School's Wasserstein’s ground-floor lounge on election evening were greeted by two large sheet cakes decked out with red, white, and blue balloons, along with stars made of frosting.

  • Individual portraits of Sarah Grant and Tony Garofano

    Perspectives on military service: Two from HLS reflect on their Marine Corps duty

    November 9, 2016

    HLS students Tony Garofano LL.M. ’17 and Sarah Grant ’19 spoke with writers for Harvard Law Today about their experiences serving in the military and studying at Harvard Law.

  • Outside of Langdell Hall after dark with lights shining on the columns

    Examining Election 2016: Faculty and scholars weigh in

    November 9, 2016

    The 2016 presidential race -- and the many events and controversies surrounding it -- have prompted HLS scholars to share their viewpoints, to examine the political landscape and to address issues that will have national and global consequences far beyond November 8.

  • Photo of a pile of Vote 2016 lapel buttons

    HLS and the 2016 Congressional Races

    November 9, 2016

    Tim Kaine ’83 will continue serving in the U.S. Senate after losing his bid to become the first Harvard Law School graduate elected vice president and he’ll be joined by several other alumni on Capitol Hill.

  • Morning in America: November 9, 2016

    November 8, 2016

    An op-ed by Heather Scheiwe Kulp: You roll out of bed, seeking coffee and your morning news. Groggily, you realize it’s Wednesday morning, November 9—the day after the presidential election. S/he’s won. You may be thrilled. You may not be. Either way, you have to go to work/the dinner table/a church potluck/your kid’s soccer game today with people who may not feel the same way. It’s morning in America, and it’s time to repair the vast breaches this election season created.

  • People standing at polling station

    The Electoral College: Here to stay?

    November 7, 2016

    Constitutional Law expert Sanford Levinson focused on the political implications of the Electoral College at HLS on Oct. 21. He emphasized that the U.S. Electoral College system is unique among the election processes of major countries, which tend towards popular vote models, and he connected it to what he terms “the Constitution of settlement."

  • Janet Reno

    Remembering Janet Reno ’63 (1938-2016)

    November 7, 2016

    Janet Reno ’63, the longest serving U.S. attorney general of the 20th century and the first woman to have ever held the post, died on Monday at age 78. Reno was nominated to the post of U.S. Attorney General by President Clinton in 1993 and she served for eight years, before stepping down in 2001.