In 1986 Samuel Issacharoff was in Springfield, Illinois, handling an election law case that revolved around restrictions on black politicians. Issacharoff, then 32, had been around...
Thomas Buergenthal ’60 has a picture of himself and his parents taken in the spring of 1937. He is three, a blond, curly-haired boy who looks...
Empirical Legal Studies is a relatively new trend in legal scholarship that applies scientific method to legal data. Almost two dozen faculty at the Law School...
In a landslide victory last spring, Ma Ying-jeou (LL.M. ’76) was elected president of Taiwan, winning in part on his campaign pledge to finally clean up...
The last eighteen months have not been kind to the U.S. economy. The collapse of American subprime asset-backed securities have left housing numbers weak and financial...
Just three decades after becoming the first person in his family to graduate from college and pursue an advanced degree, Anthony Welters ’77 will become the...