Lecture Series and Other Academic
Opportunities
The regular curriculum at Yale Law School is supplemented
by a host of events and activities that enrich legal education.
Under the auspices of student organizations and various programs,
distinguished speakers-lawyers, judges, public figures, government
officials, scholars, and other prominent individuals-give
talks or participate in panel discussions on a wide variety
of topics throughout the academic year. In addition, an abundant
resource of endowed funds brings to the School specially designated
fellows and lecturers.
In the spring term, faculty and students will be able to
attend a special Yale Law School/Humanities Center Faculty
Seminar given by David Bromwich, Bird White Housum Professor
of English at Yale. Entitled "The Political Thought of
Burke," the seminar presents a series of discussions
of Burke's Reflections on the Revolution in France,
with an early meeting in addition on The Sublime and Beautiful,
and a later one on the pamphlet wars of the 1790s.
Lecture Series
A sampling of endowed lecture programs from the 2000-2001
academic year follows.
The Robert P. Anderson Memorial Fellowship, which was established
in 1987 in memory of the senior judge of the U.S. Court of
Appeals for the Second Circuit, provides a forum for distinguished
judges to speak on matters of general importance to law and
society. In the spring of 2001, the Honorable Frank H. Easterbrook
of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit lectured
on "Judicial Discretion in Statutory Interpretation."
In 2000-2001, the Timothy B. Atkeson Environmental Practitioner
in Residence Program, which sponsors the visit of an environmental
law expert to the Law School, welcomed Klaus Töpfer,
executive director of the United Nations Environment Programme.
"Managing Global Environmental Challenges: Lessons from
the UNEP Experience" was the topic of Mr. Töpfer's
lecture.
The Ralph Gregory Elliot First Amendment Lecture was established
in 1992 with an inaugural lecture by U.S. Supreme Court Justice
John Paul Stevens. In the spring of 2001, Cornell Law School
Professor Steven Shiffrin delivered the Elliot Lecture on
"The First Amendment and the Socialization of Children."
The Arthur Allen Leff Fellowship brings to Yale Law School
individuals whose work in other disciplines illuminates the
study of law and legal institutions. The 2000-2001 Leff Fellow
was Robert D. Putnam, Peter and Isabel Malkin Professor of
Public Policy at Harvard University, who spoke on the topic
"Bowling Alone: The Collapse and Revival of the American
Community."
The Preiskel/Silverman Program on the Practicing Lawyer and
the Public Interest sponsored the 2001 Preiskel/Silverman
Lecture, given by Charlene Barshefsky, U.S. Trade Representative
in the Clinton administration. Ambassador Barshefsky's lecture
was entitled "From the Cold War to the Networked World:
Trade Policy in an Era of Transition."
The Raben Fellowship, which brings to the Law School individuals
with special expertise in securities law, financial accounting,
or related subjects, sponsored the fall 2000 lecture "The
Rise of Dispersed Ownership: The Role of Law in the Separation
of Ownership and Control," given by Professor John Coffee
of Columbia University.
The Sherrill Lectureship brings distinguished visitors with
special expertise in problems of international law and international
relations. The 2000-2001 Sherrill Lecturer was the Honorable
Louise Arbour, Justice of the Supreme Court of Canada. Justice
Arbour's lecture topic was "It Makes a Difference Who
the Victors Are: The Case for International Criminal Justice."
The Stupski Fellowship in Education, sponsored by the Larry
and Joyce Stupski Public Interest Ventures Fund, invites prominent
educators to offer their perspectives on their field. Alan
D. Bersin, a 1974 graduate of Yale Law School, and currently
superintendent of public education for the San Diego Unified
School District, gave a lecture on "Public Education:
Last Clear Chance?" in the fall of 2000.
The James A. Thomas Lecture Series, which was established
by Yale Law School students in 1989 to honor Associate Dean
James A. Thomas '64, recognizes scholars with innovative perspectives
on the relations among law, jurisprudence, and communities
of people with color. The 2000-2001 Thomas Lecturer was Natsu
Taylor Saito, associate professor at the Georgia State University
College of Law, who delivered a lecture entitled "Beyond
Reparations."
Other named lecture and fellowship programs at Yale Law School
include the following:
The Robert L. Bernstein Lecture in International Human
Rights, which was inaugurated in 1998 by Wei Jingsheng,
the political prisoner released in 1997 after almost twenty
years of continuous captivity in a Chinese jail;
The Robert M. Cover Lectures in Law and Religion, which
bring speakers to Yale to explore the intersection of legal
thought and practice and religious thought and practice;
The Harper Fellowship, which sponsors a prominent ̃gure,
selected for distinguished contribution to the public life
of the nation;
The Storrs Lectures, a series of lectures given by a prominent
scholar within the broad topic of fundamental problems with
law and jurisprudence.
Beyond the endowed lecture and fellowship programs, student
organizations and other groups regularly invite speakers to
present topics of particular interest. In the 2000-2001 academic
year, the Yale Law and Technology Society sponsored a number
of lectures and panels, including a spring 2001 lecture by
prominent litigator David Boies '66, who offered his perspective
on several cases on which he has worked, specifically his
representation of the U.S. government in the Microsoft antitrust
case; his representation of Napster against the recording
industry; and his participation in the Bush v. Gore
case before the Supreme Court.
Students in the Knight Journalism Fellowship program sponsored
a number of lectures in the 2000-2001 academic year, including
The New Republic Legal Affairs Editor Jeffrey Rosen's
lecture on "The Unwanted Gaze: The Destruction of Privacy
in America;" a talk on "Covering the Supreme Court"
by Charles Lane, reporter for The Washington Post;
and two lectures on the current capital punishment debate:
"Student Activism: Saving the Criminal Justice System,"
by Lawrence C. Marshall of Northwestern University School
of Law, and "Until I Can Be Sure: Reflections on the
Administration of the Death Penalty," given by Illinois
Governor George H. Ryan.
In addition, Yale Law School faculty frequently organize
lectures and panels on important current events. For example,
"Perspectives on Bush v. Gore" was the topic
of a faculty panel immediately following the 2000 election.
Further information about the origins and history of all
endowed fellowships and lectures at the Law School appears
under Statistics and Lists.
Lectures and other public events are also described in the
online Master
Calendar of Events, which is updated daily during
the academic year.
Special Initiatives
The Yale Law School is shaped by the intellectual
interests of its faculty and students. Those interests find
expression not only in our established curriculum and other
academic opportunities, but also in new activities that emerge
from time to time.
For example, the growing importance of international perspectives
has yielded two major initiatives. The Global Constitutionalism
Seminar, directed by Professor Paul Gewirtz, is an annual
event in which Supreme Court and constitutional court judges
from around the world meet with faculty members to discuss
issues of common concern. With generous funding from David
A. Jones '60 and David A. Jones, Jr. '88, five seminars have
already been convened. While the seminar proceedings are largely
confidential, some events are open to the Law School community.
A second initiative is designed to promote democratic institutions
and practices in Latin America through linkage activities
with two law schools in Chile, one in Argentina, and one in
Brazil. Now in its seventh year, this program permits up to
six Yale students to spend the month of June in Chile or Argentina,
and three students to spend the month in Brazil, in order
to work with Latin American law students in small study groups
and clinics, and on law journals. In February, students from
the Latin American linkage law schools visit Yale for three
weeks to participate in study groups and attend classes. In
addition, in June, legal scholars from Yale and from cosponsoring
law schools in Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Mexico, Paraguay,
Peru, Puerto Rico, and Spain convene for the Seminario en
Latino-américa de Teoría Constitucional y Política,
a four-day conference exploring the foundational ideas of
constitutional democracy.
A third initiative stems from the digital revolution. The
Information Society Project, directed by Professor Jack Balkin,
studies the implications of the Internet and the new information
technologies for law and society. The project embraces a variety
of activities, including fellowships for young scholars and
advice and education for policymakers, business leaders, nonprofit
organizations, and the legal community.
The Yale Center for Environmental Law and
Policy
The center, established in 1994 by Yale Law School
and the Yale School of Forestry & Environmental Studies,
draws upon resources throughout Yale University to develop
and advance environmental policy locally, regionally, nationally,
and globally. The center's mission is to introduce students
to environmental law challenges, policy tools, and research
methodologies; encourage debate and creative thought on environmental
issues; develop and advance policies responding to critical
environmental problems on the local, regional, national, and
global levels; and provide a forum where scholars, environmental
advocates, businesspeople, government officials, and representatives
of international organizations can exchange views. The center
supports a variety of research projects. These include the
Global Environment and Trade Study, which provides research
on environmental questions arising in the context of trade
liberalization and environmental integration; the Global Environmental
Governance Dialogue, which seeks to identify ways to strengthen
the international environmental regime; and the Environmental
Sustainability Index Project, an initiative focused on developing
environmental "metrics" to evaluate governmental
performance in pollution control and natural resource management-with
a report on the environmental sustainability of 122 economies
presented at the World Economic Forum's Annual Meeting in
Davos.
The center runs the Environmental Protection Clinic, where
law students have opportunities to address environmental law
and policy problems on behalf of client organizations. In
recent years, Yale student teams have worked with a range
of community groups, environmental groups, think tanks, government
agencies, and international organizations.
The center also sponsors an Environmental Law and Policy
Lecture Series, which provides a forum for visiting scholars,
politicians, and environmental professionals. The director
of the center is Professor Daniel C. Esty, who holds a joint
appointment in the Law School and the School of Forestry &
Environmental Studies.
The Center for Studies in Law, Economics,
and Public Policy
The Center for Studies in Law, Economics, and Public
Policy is designed to facilitate the scholarly interests of
the many distinguished law and economics scholars at Yale,
including Professors Ackerman, Alstott, Ayres, Calabresi,
Coleman, Ellickson, Graetz, Hansmann, Klevorick, Kronman,
Mashaw, Priest, Romano, Rose, Rose-Ackerman, Schuck, Schwartz,
and Winter. The center supports a broad range of scholarly
work. Under the center, the John M. Olin Program in Law and
Economics supports John M. Olin Scholarships to students interested
in law and economics, to students conducting law and economics
research projects over the summer, as well as to students
who wish to obtain joint degrees in law and economics; the
John M. Olin Prize for the best student paper on a law and
economics subject; the Journal of Law, Economics, and Organization,
edited by Professor Alan Schwartz; the center's Working Paper
Series; and the Law, Economics, and Organization Workshop,
at which scholars from other institutions and from Yale present
papers for student and faculty criticism. The center also
provides an umbrella for two programs: the Program in Civil
Liability, established to promote comprehensive reanalysis
of the modern law of torts, products liability, professional
malpractice, insurance, and other subjects related to our
civil liability system; and the Program for Studies in Capitalism,
which supports research on the operation of capitalism as
a mechanism of economic growth; the ethical bases of capitalism;
the relation between capitalism and the poor, and between
capitalism and democracy. The center's codirectors are Professors
George L. Priest and Susan Rose-Ackerman.
The Yale Law School Center for the Study
of Corporate Law
The Yale Law School Center for the Study of Corporate
Law was created to facilitate research and teaching in the
business law area. The center's research and teaching interests
include corporate law and the law of other nongovernmental
organizations; the regulation of financial markets and intermediaries;
and the legal framework of finance, including the law of bankruptcy,
corporate reorganization, and secured transactions.
Every year the center hosts a roundtable, open to the Law
School community, which is attended by leading corporate lawyers,
public officials, and scholars. The roundtables are one-day
events that seek to foster a dialogue between academics and
practitioners on the important corporate law issues of the
day through presentations of scholarly papers and panel discussions.
The center hosts the Raben Fellowship, which brings to the
Law School a leading expert in securities law for a public
lecture. The center also sponsors an occasional breakfast
program in New York City, which features panel discussions
on current topics in corporate law by alumni and faculty.
For more information, visit the
center's Web site at www.yale.edu/law/ccl/.
Professor Alan Schwartz is the director of the center. The
center has a board of advisers, chaired by Robert Todd Lang
'47, consisting of YLS alumni Roger Aaron '68, Curtis H. Barnette
'62, Boris Feldman '80, Arthur Fleischer, Jr. '58, Stephen
Fraidin '64, Benjamin F. Stapleton '69, Craig M. Wasserman
'86, and Judge Ralph K. Winter '60. In addition to Judge Winter,
an adjunct professor at YLS, other members of the Law School
faculty serving on the board are Dean Anthony Kronman and
Professors Ian Ayres, Henry Hansmann, and Roberta Romano.
The China Law Center
The China Law Center was established at Yale Law School
to increase understanding of China's legal system and assist
in China's legal reform process. To these ends, the center
is sponsoring research, promoting academic exchanges, and
undertaking a variety of cooperative projects on important
legal reform issues. Since the center was launched, it has
begun in-depth cooperative projects with leading Chinese legal
experts and institutions in the areas of judicial reform,
administrative law, and legal education. These projects involve
a range of activities, including research visits to Yale and
to China, workshops and seminars in the United States and
China, and publications. Yale Law School students are encouraged
to participate in the center's work. The center also provides
research grants to support law students wishing to do research
in China during the summer. The center has received generous
support from David A. Jones '60 and David A. Jones, Jr. '88,
Yale parents Henry Fan and Robert Ng, the Smith Richardson
Foundation, the Luce Foundation, and the Ford Foundation.
The director of the center is Professor Paul Gewirtz. The
deputy director is Jonathan Hecht and the program coordinator
is Jennifer Choo.
The Arthur Liman Public Interest Program
The Arthur Liman Public Interest Program was established
in 1997 by family and friends of the late Arthur Liman '57
to honor his commitment to public interest law.
The Liman Program funds fellowships for Law School graduates
working in public interest law, provides funding for student
associates in residence at the Law School, awards grants to
qualifying organizations for public interest projects, and
holds colloquia for attorneys, academics, and students on
relevant topics in legal services.
Arthur Liman Public Interest Fellowships are awarded annually
to Yale Law School graduates. The fellowships provide support
to work full time for a year in an ongoing or start-up project
in any area of the legal profession devoted to the public
interest. During the fellowship year, Liman Fellows may spend
time in residence at Yale Law School to conduct seminars based
on their work. In the past, Fellows have engaged in projects
securing rights for workfare recipients, criminal defendants,
migrant workers, the elderly, and immigrants.
Each year, law students work as associate fellows, providing
substantive assistance to graduate fellows and helping to
plan and participate in the annual Liman Colloquium. Topics
for the colloquium series have included The Future of Legal
Services, Valuing Low-Wage Workers, and Welfare "Reform"
and Response.
Since its establishment, the range of programs funded by
the Arthur Liman Public Interest Program has reflected the
breadth of interests, concerns, and commitments of Arthur
Liman. While working as a partner at Paul, Weiss, Rifkind,
Wharton and Garrison, and providing counsel to a range of
corporate and individual clients, Liman also led several major
institutions devoted to providing services to those who could
not afford lawyers, including the Legal Aid Society of New
York; the board that created the Legal Action Center; the
Vera Institute for Justice; Neighborhood Legal Services of
Harlem; and the Capital Defender Project of New York.
The Arthur Liman Professor of Law is Judith Resnik. The director
of the Liman Program is Deborah J. Cantrell.
The Orville H. Schell, Jr. Center for International
Human Rights
The Orville H. Schell, Jr. Center for International
Human Rights was established at Yale Law School in 1989 in
honor of Orville Schell, a distinguished New York City lawyer
and partner at Hughes, Hubbard & Reed, who was vice chairman
of Helsinki Watch and chairman of Americas Watch from its
founding in 1981 until his death in 1987.
International human rights practitioners rarely have the
opportunity to consider the theoretical issues their work
entails, while scholars studying human rights lack a forum
for interdisciplinary dialogue. At the same time, law students
are eager to apply the lessons they are learning in the classroom
to further the cause of human rights. The Schell Center addresses
these needs by seeking to increase knowledge and understanding
of international human rights issues; equip lawyers and other
professionals with the skills needed to advance the cause
of international human rights; and assist human rights organizations.
The Schell Center conducts the Allard
K. Lowenstein International Human Rights Law Clinic every
term. The center also sponsors frequent lectures, panels,
symposia, and informal discussions on a wide range of human
rights issues. During 2000-2001, the center organized a fall
conference, "Colombia-U.S. Relations: The War on Drugs,
the Peace Process and Prospects for Human Rights"; a
series of speakers on the European human rights system; and
the annual Robert L. Bernstein International Human Rights
Fellowship Symposium, "Politics and Human Rights: A Bipartisan
Agenda for U.S. Foreign Policy." In the fall, the weekly
human rights workshop focused, in part, on human rights in
China. Other workshop topics included promoting international
humanitarian law in Israeli-occupied Palestinian territory,
the moral dilemmas arising from the effort to try Chilean
General Pinochet in Spain, and HIV/AIDS and human rights.
The center also organized talks on rape as a war crime, women's
access to justice in Kosovo, and other issues in Kosovo since
the NATO air campaign, as well as workshops on summer and
postgraduate human rights job possibilities.
The Schell Center administers several human rights fellowships.
The Robert L. Bernstein Fellowship in International Human
Rights, inaugurated in 1997, funds one or two recent Yale
Law School graduates annually to engage in full-time human
rights work for a year. In 2000-2001, Bernstein Fellows worked
for the International Committee of Lawyers for Tibet and in
Northern Ireland with the Committee on the Administration
of Justice. The center also invites established scholars and
advocates to visit the Law School as Schell Fellows to conduct
research, teach seminars, and meet with students. Each summer,
the center provides students with travel grants for international
human rights work. In 2000, Schell Summer Fellowships allowed
thirty-five students to spend all or part of the summer doing
human rights internships or research throughout the world.
The Robert M. Cover/Allard K. Lowenstein Fellow in International
Human Rights Law spends two years at the Law School, working
on all aspects of the center's work, including supervision
of the Lowenstein Clinic. The Schell Center also supports
the Lowenstein International Human Rights Project, the Yale
Human Rights and Development Law Journal, and other student
projects related to human rights.
The center has received generous support from the John Merck
Fund and friends and associates of Orville H. Schell, Jr.,
as well as the law firm of Hughes, Hubbard & Reed, the
Merck Pharmaceutical Foundation, and the Arthur Ross Foundation.
The director of the Schell Center is Professor Paul W. Kahn.
The executive director is James J. Silk. The Cover/Lowenstein
Fellow is Deena R. Hurwitz. The Schell Center's e-mail address
is schell.law@yale.edu.
Opportunities for Study in Legal History
The study of American, English, and European legal
history occupies an important place in the Law School's curriculum.
Recent and current offerings include courses on the history
of the common law, the history of criminal procedure, constitutional
history, American legal history, and European legal history.
Seminars and lectures by outside scholars in legal history
supplement the regular curricular offerings. An informal legal
history program brings together students and faculty interested
in legal history; it includes students and faculty from the
Law School and the Yale Department of History as well as from
elsewhere within and outside the University. The Law School
also encourages advanced study and original research in American,
English, and European legal history. A few students pursue
the joint J.D.-Ph.D. program in History or in American Studies.
Visiting Scholars
Each year the Law School has in residence a few visiting
scholars engaged in nondegree research. Visiting scholars
may audit one or two courses per term (with the consent of
individual instructors) and make use of library facilities
for their work. There are no set requirements for admission;
most visiting scholars are college and university teachers
from law and other disciplines who are engaged in law-related
work, but applications will be considered from any person
of outstanding qualifications. Each visiting scholar is charged
a minimum accommodation fee of $4,288 per term. No financial
aid from the Law School is available for scholars in this
program.
Application can be made by letter to Visiting Scholar Program,
Yale Law School, PO Box 208215, New Haven CT 06520-8215. Applications
should include biographical information and a description
of the proposed research.
International scholars should General
Information for information on the Office
of International Students and Scholars at Yale.
Irving S. Ribicoff Fellowship for Post-Graduate
Research
The newly created Irving S. Ribicoff Fellowship for
Post-Graduate Research will be awarded each year to a recent
Yale Law School graduate interested in becoming a law teacher.
The recipient spends a year in residence at the Law School
working on a scholarly writing project and preparing for a
teaching career in law. Any recent Yale Law School graduate
is eligible to apply, including those with J.D., LL.M., M.S.L.,
or other graduate law degrees. For more information, contact
Associate Dean Barbara Safriet at barbara.safriet@yale.edu.
Next: Options and Requirements
|