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The Law School was the third graduate school at Harvard to admit women after the Graduate School of Education and the Medical School. It did so twenty-seven years before Harvard College fully admitted women as undergraduates in 1977.
Loretta Lynch graduated from Harvard Law School in 1984 and currently serves as the Attorney General of the United States — the first African-American woman to ever hold the position.
Joseph Henry Beale (October 12, 1861 – January 20, 1943) was an American law professor at Harvard Law School and served as the first dean of University of Chicago Law School. He was notable for his advancement of legal formalism, as well as his work in conflict of laws, corporations, and criminal law. [1]
Education: Harvard University University of Cambridge Yale University : Title: Kirkland & Ellis Professor of Law: Spouse: Ruth Greenwood: Awards: Politico's "50 List" National Law Journal "Chicago's 40 under 40" Illinois Legal Eagle Award: Academic work; Discipline: Election law, Constitutional law: Institutions
The Harvard Law Bulletin is the magazine of record for Harvard Law School. [58] The Harvard Law Bulletin was first published in April 1948. The magazine is currently published twice a year, but in previous years has been published four or six times a year. The magazine was first published online in fall 1997. [59]
He received a Marshall Scholarship [10] to study at Sussex University then graduated from Harvard Law School in 1965. Sargentich was one of only eight Harvard Law School students to receive the summa cum laude designation at Harvard Law from 1969-2007 when the designation was determined by a Grade Point Average threshold. While earning this ...
Richard Reeve Baxter (14 February 1921 – 25 September 1980) was an American jurist [1] and from 1950 until his death the preeminent figure on the law of war. [2] Baxter served as a judge on the International Court of Justice (1979–1980), as a professor of law at Harvard University (1954 - 1979) and as an enlisted man and officer in the U.S. Army (1942–46,1948–54).
Upon graduating law school, he held a judicial clerkship with Levin H. Campbell of the United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit and served as an associate at the Boston law firm Choate, Hall & Stewart. He worked as a federal prosecutor in the U.S. Attorney's office in Boston before joining the counsel's office at Harvard University.