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The People V Harvard Law: How Americas Oldest Law School Turned Its Back on Free Speech

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

The People V Harvard Law: How Americas Oldest Law School Turned Its Back on Free Speech

Contributors:
ISBN:

9781893554986

Publisher:

Encounter Books,USA

Imprint:

Encounter Books,USA

Publication Date:

25th May 2005

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Dewey:

320

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

210

Dimensions:

Width 176mm, Height 234mm

Weight:

496g

Description

In 2002, Kiwi Camara, a Filipino-American student studying at the Harvard Law School, joined most of his classmates in posting his class outlines for the previous year on the school web site. But in his notes, Camara had used shorthand terms that some regarded as racial slurs. In the furor that followed, administrators proposed a speech code to prohibit members of the law school community from voicing racially insensitive remarks. The chain of events triggered by this decision convulsed the nation's oldest and most prestigious school of law, and called into question its commitment to freedom of speech and basic constitutional liberties. The clashing ideas and personalities of this case are at the core of The People v Harvard Law. In this fascinating insider's account, Andrew Peyton Thomas recounts how the school's intellectual heavyweights - Charles Fried, Alan Dershowitz, Laurence Tribe, Charles Nessen and others - were drawn into open conflict with each other and with the administration. Thomas takes us into the administrative offices, faculty lounges and classrooms, showing that the Camara case is only the latest front in a culture war that has ravaged Harvard Law over the last 25 years. Racial demagogues have challenged its integrity and sense of mission; a growing cadre of Marxist-inspired professors have taught that American law is a sham controlled by white capitalist oppressors; and students who dissent from this smothering orthodoxy are hissed at in class and openly harassed throughout the school. In this brilliant portrait of a historic American institution in crisis, Andrew Peyton Thomas explains how what happens at Harvard Law affects the nation whose courts, boardrooms, entertainment industry and government are filled with its graduates.

Author Bio

Andrew Peyton Thomas is himself a graduate of the Harvard Law School, and was a legal assistant for the Boston NAACP. He has written for the Wall Street Journal, the Weekly Standard, National Review and other publications. Mr Thomas lives in Phoenix, Arizona, with his wife and three children.

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