~ Archive for June, 2008 ~

Doing Stuff in Cambridge

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So I’m sure many of you have heard of meetup.com. I had, but I thought it was just about politics. Today, however, I was looking for a way to play tennis more often and came upon the Somerville Tennis Meetup Group (Somerville is the next town over from Cambridge). Why am I telling you this? Because I noticed that when I typed 02138 (our zip code at HLS) into the general search window at the “Find a Meetup” link, it listed a ton of activities happening in the near future with groups of people in the Cambridge/Boston area. Now some of them appear to be a little odd, but who am I to judge…

I just thought I’d offer that link up as a way of finding interesting off-campus activities in the area.

Exit Interviews with Class of 2008

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Saw this on the home page and didn’t want you to miss it!

Goldsmith, Dellinger on Slate

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I noticed this give and take on recent Supreme Court cases on Slate and since two of the four participants are members of the HLS faculty, I thought you might be interested. Professor Jack Goldsmith is an expert on national security law and teaches constitutional law and other courses. Visiting Professor Walter Dellinger leads one of our Supreme Court Clinicals.

Visit this link for The Supreme Court Breakfast Table.

Human Rights Updates

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I get a biweekly e-mail from the Human Rights Program updating me on their latest activities. The most recent one discussed a report the Human Rights Clinic released on prosecutions of apartheid-era crimes in South Africa and HLS student participation in the negotiations to ban cluster munitions. I thought some people out there might like to be on the list, so I asked Mike Jones at HRP to fill me in. He responded:

“Students can sign up for it directly on our Web site…http://www.law.harvard.edu/programs/hrp. There’s a box on the left side under events where folks can enter their emails to sign up for our e-newsletter.”

Africa’s Forgotten Refugees

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Harvard Law School has a very active Immigration and Refugee Clinical Program, and we regularly bring speakers to campus to highlight related issues. Recently, I sat in on an interesting discussion on African asylum hosted by Dr. Wagacha Burton, the co-founder of Mapendo, a privately funded NGO that since 2005 has sought to identify, rescue and protect African refugees who have fallen through the cracks of traditional humanitarian efforts.

According to the 1951 Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees, a refugee is defined as “a person who has fled from and/or cannot return to their country due to a well-founded fear of persecution, including war or civil conflict.” Thus, for over half a century, the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) has sought to lead and coordinate action to protect refugees and resolve racial, religious, national, social and political conflicts worldwide.

“Today,” Dr. Burton began, “there are over 3 million total African refugees.” Among those he cited as vulnerable refugees are survivors of violence and torture; those individuals with serious threats to their lives in their country of refuge; and women at risk.

A case that has garnered particular attention over the last year is that of the urban refugees of Nairobi, Kenya where Mapendo operates the only healthcare clinic dedicated to the city’s urban refugee population of 185,000. According to Dr. Burton, “Nairobi’s refugees live unseen and forgotten. They are subjected to an abuse of human rights including lack of access to healthcare, increased risks of sexual and gender based violence, child abduction, forced marriage, and arbitrary arrest and detention.”

On the topic of solutions, Edmundson and Dr. Burton outlined the options for UNHCR. “Voluntary repatriation is the best outcome,” said Dr. Burton,” because it reestablishes ethnic communities.” Barring this option, Mapendo works in conjunction with UNHCR to attempt local integration and third country resettlement. Unfortunately, although the United States has implemented a resettlement regime that allows a quota for African refugees the quota is typically not met due to the inability of NGOs to properly mobilize the refugees. To rectify this, Mapendo refers qualified parties to the U.S. Embassies in Africa and has begun collaborating with local NGOs in East and Central Africa to research and identify at-risk populations.

Don’t Miss this Clip of Sacks-Freund Teaching Award Winner Daryl Levinson

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Graduating students vote on the best teacher at Harvard Law School. The winner of the Sacks-Freund Teaching Award this year was Professor Daryl Levinson. I was in attendance for his speech on Class Day and it brought the house down. Visit this link to read more about it and to watch the video clip.

A Marshall Plan for Africa

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Here’s some food for thought for all of you Law and Economics aficionados out there:

It was during a commencement speech here at Harvard exactly sixty years ago that Secretary of State George C. Marshall outlined his ambitious plan to rehabilitate and modernize the economies of Western European friends and allies in the wake of WWII atrocities. It is in much the same spirit that R. Glenn Hubbard, Dean of the Columbia Graduate Business School, spoke recently at HLS of a Marshall Plan for Africa “In 1960,” he began, “the average labor productivity in sub-Saharan Africa equaled Asia… there is no reason why the same scheme, based on economic reform, could not also jumpstart business and productivity in Africa.”

British Prime Minister, Gordon Brown first argued for the notion of extending the Marshall Plan to Africa in 2005. “Gordon’s plan focused on the social sector… it was essentially a bigger package of the same old stuff,” said Hubbard. Unlike Gordon’s plan, the original Marshall Plan emphasized the business sector and aimed to restore productivity to local businesses, circulate funds to rebuild commercial infrastructure, implement economic policies to restore the private sector, and distribute the funds evenly around Europe. “It offered something new…on the micro level,” said Hubbard, “There is a difference between the development of social services and the economic reform… charity is not economic development.”

The thrust of Hubbard’s argument is that a Marshall Plan for Africa would by and large replace NGOs with businesses to ignite the economic reforms that would in turn mitigate poverty and humanitarian crisis. “Business leaders have been conspicuously absent from African business talks, which is unfortunate,” Hubbard commented. “For this reason, I feel that business schools are cauldrons for the study of practices and management skills that work… Inventory that best practices in developed countries and import them.”

Hubbard admitted that his plan was not without its controversies, especially when several students questioned the differences of human capital and governance ability that existed in pre-war Europe and Africa and whether or not Africa’s social ills were going to be management problems in and of themselves. “This is your moral responsibility,” insisted Hubbard, “and the antecedent is resoundingly clear.”

 

Blogging about Kessler

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You may remember that I mentioned student David Kessler in an earlier blog post when he published his work on the Fourth Amendment. It seems another blogger out there is also talking about David…this time in re his case comment on the Hallstreet Associates case. Well, I found him first, but I’m sure many others will follow!

Commencement 2008

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Today is graduation day and in a few short moments I’m going to slip out of the office to join the Class of 2008 for their lunch (and maybe I’ll stick around for Tejinder’s speech..oh, and the dean’s too).

Yesterday was class day and a number of students were recognized for their commitment to the Harvard Law School community and to the broader community outside our campus. According to Dean Kagan, the graduates performed 500+ hours on average of pro bono work during their three years here. The Class of 2008 as a whole performed almost 300,000 hours of pro bono work. This is a great accomplishment and portends well for their service to the public down the road.

I am especially pleased this year to see the students I admitted as transfers two summers ago. They will be the first graduates of this Law School whose files passed through my hands, but I take no credit for the success they will have. I just got a chance to discover their greatness.

Good luck to the Class of 2008! I hope my path crosses with many of yours down the road. Come back and say hello from time to time.

It’s a Question of National Security!

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Can’t get security clearance? Don’t bother applying for these jobs…

For those students interested in pursuing legal careers within the Government, a National Security Summer Jobs panel was held a few weeks ago by several 2Ls and 3Ls who had completed internships in New York, Washington, DC, and Virginia.

Erik Swabb kicked off the panel’s remarks. He interned with the Counterterrorism Section at DOJ. “Though unpaid, I was able to deal with substantive legal issues… and was given broad exposure to the National Security System.” Though a highly positive experience, Swabb was merely the first of most panelists to warn that feedback from agency attorneys can be difficult to obtain.

Megan Gaffney agreed and expanded upon Swabb’s account—she was also at DOJ but in the National Security Unit. “I also was dealt amazingly substantive work and really felt like I was contributing to the Division within my small group… but, the attorneys are indeed swamped with work.” Gaffney and Swabb insisted that interns be proactive in order to get the most out of their internships. “The attorneys, if nothing else, wanted me to be interested in my work,” said Gaffney.

Foremost of many students’ concerns was the need for security clearances. The panelists urged students interested in agency jobs to get the ball rolling early if for no other reason that to facilitate the start date of one’s job and to be able to participate in more highly classified assignment. As some of the earliest positions available to 1Ls, National Security internships will make offers this winter that are contingent upon successful completion of a security clearance.

Nervous? Don’t be. “The concern of passing a clearance for past drug usage or extensive travels abroad are not reasons enough not to apply,” said Daniel Adams, who interned at Defense in the Office of the General Counsel. “Be honest and up front, and they’ll be more forgiving than if you lie.”

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