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Student Spotlights

  • Diplomat Rising

    July 1, 2007

    Last fall, when most new LL.M. students were just settling into their studies in Langdell Hall, Sajjad Khoshroo ’07 found himself on the other side of Harvard Square—and in the middle of a political demonstration. As Mohammad Khatami’s personal assistant and interpreter, he accompanied the former president of Iran to a conference at the John F. Kennedy School of Government.

  • Raquel Ferreira Dodge

    A Brazilian prosecutor builds a case—and a prison—to last 100 years

    April 1, 2007

    When threatened in court by the leader of a death squad known for killing its victims with chainsaws, Brazilian prosecutor Raquel Ferreira Dodge was undeterred.

  • Moot Court Panel

    Moot court finals rule at HLS

    November 16, 2006

    On Tuesday, November 14, Harvard Law School hosted the 95th Annual Moot Court Final Competition. In front of a standing room only crowd in Ames Courtroom, two teams of six HLS students each argued the case of Adam’s Apple Markets v. Aphrodite Cosmetics.

  • The source on outsourcing

    September 1, 2006

    Law, too, is going offshore. Two Harvard Law students are getting a firsthand look.

  • In humanity’s lost and found

    September 1, 2006

    On world refugee day in June, Kofi Annan and Angelina Jolie urged the world to keep hope alive for millions of refugees. In a camp in eastern Africa, Scott Paltrowitz ’08 found that hope is often all that refugees have.

  • Countdown

    April 23, 2006

    A day-by-day account of the run-up to the Ames Moot Court Finals--and some thoughts afterward from the chief justice of the state of Ames (aka David Souter '66)

  • Jeff Jamison '06

    The Katrina connection: HLS contributes to flood relief

    April 23, 2006

    After Hurricane Katrina hit the Gulf Coast, many HLS students felt helpless watching news accounts of the unfolding devastation while beginning fall classes. The law school had posted links for the university's matching donations program and announced plans to host 25 law students from Tulane and Loyola tuition-free. But HLS students sought their own ways to donate their time and talents.

  • Not on Her Watch: Rebecca Hamilton ’07 works to stop genocide now

    September 1, 2005

    Few students admitted to Harvard Law School question whether they should build roads instead. But when Rebecca Hamilton '07 spent the summer of 2004 in Sudan trying to help thousands of displaced people get home, she found herself longing for such concrete solutions for the war-torn country.

  • Guilty until proven innocent

    September 1, 2005

    Brandon Moon was a 25-year-old college student at the University of Texas at El Paso in 1988 when he was convicted of rape and sentenced to 75 years in prison. Last December, after 16 years behind bars, he was released following conclusive DNA testing that proved his innocence.

  • Putting together the pieces

    July 1, 2005

    After her people were slaughtered by neighbors, Geraldine Umugwaneza LL.M. '05 knows that forgiveness is elusive, but she is determined to help Rwanda move forward.

  • Write of Passage

    July 1, 2005

    A sampling from this year's crop of 3L papers.

  • Gateway to a better world

    April 1, 2005

    Expanded program helps Harvard lawyers advance human rights abroad.

  • Tessa Platt '05

    A practical good

    April 1, 2005

    Harvard law students have always felt the pressure to do well, but the Class of '05 is the first that has to do good.

  • Harvard Legal Aid Bureau, 1914-1915

    90 Years at the Bureau

    April 1, 2005

    Since 1914, when a group of Harvard Law students formed an organization to provide legal aid to the poor, the Harvard Legal Aid Bureau has served as a bridge to the legal profession for nearly 2,000 students. The first year, from rented office space in Central Square, students took on 191 cases and won $4,268.13 for their clients.

  • Meeting of men in cowboy hats

    South of the Border

    September 1, 2004

    Charlotte Sanders '05 and José Rodriguez '06 did legal outreach this summer to help workers who pick America's produce. They reached out all the way to Mexico.

  • Sharon Kelly

    Hearing the Call

    July 1, 2004

    Sharon Kelly '04 smiles when she recalls meeting a teenage girl who'd asked her mother for a birthday present: to drive her hours and hours across the plains of Iowa to a town hall meeting of a presidential candidate.

  • Brett Dakin '03

    Our Man in Laos

    July 1, 2003

    When Brett Dakin '03 was living in Laos, he sneaked into a performance not meant for foreigners, commemorating the founding of the Lao People's Revolutionary Party.

  • Woman splashing in water

    Here She Comes?

    April 24, 2003

    Erika Harold should not be confused with Elle Woods. Even though she did show her brains in the end, Woods, played by Reese Witherspoon in "Legally Blonde," was, let's face it, a bit lacking in the gravitas department.

  • Illustration of a heart and money in scales of justice

    A Firm Cause

    April 24, 2003

    Ask most Harvard Law School students, and they are likely to tell you that social causes and law firms don't mix.

  • Ahmed el-Gaili

    Visa Not American Express

    April 1, 2003

    A Harvard Law School student works a few weeks in a London firm over the summer and can’t get back to the United States in time for his fall semester.

  • A Roommate with a View

    July 1, 2002

    When he was a college student, Michael Kleinman '03 shared a room in Yemen for five weeks with a fellow American. But they never had the "what's your major, do you have a girlfriend, where are you from, what music do you like" chat.