With the 10th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks on the horizon, a group of distinguished judges and lawyers, faculty, trustees, alumni, and their guests gathered in...
After stories of abuse and torture at the Guantánamo Bay detention facility began seeping out in 2003, human rights groups demanded basic rights for detainees. But...
Trustees Leonard Wilf (LL.M. ’77) and Mark Wilf ’87 cut the ribbon on the Law School’s newest building, Wilf Hall, which they generously underwrote. Located at...
Many lawyers map out their career plans with precision. They know exactly what kind of law they want to practice almost from the minute they begin...
A half-century ago, when audacious black southern men had grave reason to fear for their lives, Charles Swinger Conley ’55 hung a shingle in his native...
As environmental policy coordinator for WE ACT for Environmental Justice in Harlem—her first job after graduation—Stephanie Tyree ’08 watched from afar as residents in her home...
Beginning in late 2002, Wyeth Pharmaceuticals was hit with a torrent of lawsuits brought by women who alleged that its two controversial hormone-replacement-therapy drugs Prempro and...
In 1946, 12-year-old Gordon Martin Jr. played for Boston’s all-white West Roxbury baseball team. It was a year before Jackie Robinson broke the color barrier, and...
On April 1, Joakim Dungel (LL.M. ’07), 33, died when a large group of demonstrators attacked the U.N. mission where he worked as a human rights...
For a guy who has been at the top of both Big Law and Wall Street, Robert Kindler has a pretty idiosyncratic background. Start with the...