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  • Naz K Modirzadeh (PILAC)

    Naz Modirzadeh named professor of practice

    May 16, 2016

    Naz K. Modirzadeh '02, the founding director of the Harvard Law School Program on International Law and Armed Conflict (PILAC), has been appointed as a professor of practice at Harvard Law School.

  • Martha Minow’s next chapter

    May 12, 2016

    Martha Minow's 8-year tenure as dean of Harvard Law School has been nothing short of transformative: Among many other things, she has overseen the expansion of clinical programs and public service initiatives at the school; engendered diversification of faculty, staff and the student body; and supported the pursuit of innovative and entrepreneurial ventures--changes that will have a lasting impact on the school and legal scholarship for many years to come.

  • Mayar Dahabieh LL.M. ’12: 1988-2015

    May 12, 2016

    Of Wit and Passion Mayar was the kind of friend everyone wanted to be around. Wit was a constant. Laughter was guaranteed. Mayar was the…

  • Holger Spamann smiling at the camera with arms folded in a longsleeve black shirt

    Holger Spamann, expert in corporate governance and finance, appointed professor of law at Harvard

    May 10, 2016

    Holger Spamann L.L.M. '01 S.J.D. '09, an expert in corporate governance and finance, has been appointed as a tenured professor of law at Harvard Law School.

  • HLS faculty maintain top position in SSRN citation rankings

    Bebchuk, Coates and Fried among top ten corporate and securities articles of 2015

    May 10, 2016

    The Corporate Practice Commentator recently announced the list of the Ten Best Corporate and Securities Articles selected by an annual poll of corporate and securities law academics. The list includes three articles from Harvard Law faculty associated with the Program on Corporate Governance, Professors Lucian Bebchuk, John Coates, and Jesse Fried.

  • Nagin_Daniel

    Nagin honored with Boston Bar Association’s legal services award

    May 10, 2016

    Harvard Law School Clinical Professor Daniel Nagin will receive the Boston Bar Association's John G. Brooks Legal Services Award during the association's annual Law Day Dinner on May 12.

  • Caroline Simon preparing for the Williston Competition

    Time Capsule

    May 10, 2016

    In the fall of 1962, Caroline “Cal” Simon ’65 started at Harvard Law, one of 23 women in a class of 540. Her reflections on the experience are perfectly preserved in dozens of sharply witty letters she wrote to her family—letters she rediscovered when her father died. Together, they give an indelible sense of life at the school in the mid-1960s, and specifically, life as a woman there, a decade after women were first admitted.

  • Assistant Attorney General John Carlin ’99

    Quiet Intelligence

    May 10, 2016

    For more than seven years, John Carlin ’99 has been at the center of the most sensitive counterterrorism cases, which have often involved tricky technological questions—first as an adviser to FBI Director Robert Mueller and then at the National Security Division.

  • Cincinnati skyline at night

    Solutions from Cincinnati

    May 10, 2016

    Now in its 14th year, a compact on policing in Cincinnati, Ohio, focused on building strong police-community relationships is a lauded model nationwide. John Cranley ’99, now the city’s mayor, was there from the start of the landmark agreement known as the Collaborative.

  • Gene Park

    From the NYPD to HLS

    May 10, 2016

    Gene Park has found that his greatest challenge this year has been making the transition from decisive cop mode to contemplative student.

  • Royall Shield

    A Question of History

    May 10, 2016

    On March 14, the Harvard Corporation voted to retire the Harvard Law School shield, following the recommendation of an HLS committee. The shield is modeled on the family crest of Isaac Royall, whose bequest endowed the first professorship of law at Harvard. Royall was the son of an Antiguan slaveholder.

  • Justice Salia

    HLS Reflects on the Legacy of Justice Scalia

    May 10, 2016

    With the passing of Justice Antonin Scalia ’60 of the U.S. Supreme Court on February 13 has come an outpouring of remembrances and testaments to his transformative presence during his 30 years on the Court. On February 24, Dean Martha Minow and a panel of seven Harvard Law School professors, each of whom had a personal or professional connection to the justice, gathered to remember his life and work.

  • Illustration of eye looking down from the sky at and through a home.

    The New Age of Surveillance

    May 10, 2016

    The Internet of Things may be about to change our lives as radically as the Internet itself did 20 years ago. The implications for privacy, national security, human rights, cyberespionage and the economy are staggering.

  • Professor Richard Parker sitting in an electric wheelchair smiling in front of a bookcase of books

    On Working with Constraints: A Q&A with Richard Parker

    May 10, 2016

    HLS Professor Richard Parker ’70, a constitutional law scholar and a populist, reflects on a life-changing event seven years out—what it has altered and what it has not.

  • A Place to Stay

    May 10, 2016

    Harvard Law students provide legal referrals to outside agencies and other services at Y2Y—the new shelter in Harvard Square for homeless youth aged 18-24 staffed by young people about the same age.

  • HLS Clinical students

    Meeting at Cops’ Corner

    May 10, 2016

    In just one decade, Everett, Massachusetts, once a predominantly white city, has become the most racially and ethnically diverse in the commonwealth. Building communication between police officers and local youth is a priority for Chief of the Everett Police Department Steven A. Mazzie, who is white, as are 86 percent of his officers. Last fall he invited a team of HLS students from the Harvard Negotiation & Mediation Clinical Program to Everett for an impartial assessment.

  • Facing Down Discrimination

    May 10, 2016

    Raheemah Abdulaleem ’01 was standing on a Washington, D.C., street corner in 2009 on her way to work at the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division when a man yelled at her from his car to “go back to your country.” An African-American who grew up in Philadelphia in a family whose roots in the United States are nearly as old as the country, Abdulaleem was wearing a hijab, the traditional headscarf worn by some Muslim women.

  • Black and white photo of President Kennedy shaking hands with James B. Donovan

    A Starring Role

    May 10, 2016

    In last year’s Academy Award-nominated film “Bridge of Spies,” Tom Hanks plays a lawyer who defends an accused Soviet spy in the U.S. The Hanks character appears to be dumbfounded that he has been asked to take on such an assignment. “I’m an insurance lawyer,” he says. The real lawyer whom Hanks portrays, James B. Donovan ’40, was that—and much more.

  • Philip B. Heymann '60

    Wise Promoter of Accountable Government

    May 10, 2016

    For more than half a century, Phil Heymann has served the nation— and Harvard Law School—with distinction.

  • Bert Rein ’64

    A Senior Rookie

    May 10, 2016

    Bert Rein '64 came to Supreme Court advocacy later in life and has ­focused on litigation challenging race-based protections.

  • Shepardshaking hands with Nixon

    He Was Not a Crook

    May 10, 2016

    When he was a student at HLS, a friend made Geoff Shepard ’69 a campaign button that said “Nixon Shepard,” representing Shepard’s enthusiasm for the presidential candidacy of Richard Nixon and his hope that he would join Nixon in the White House. Shepard still has the button today and is still advocating for the president he served and defended.