The Harvard Law Record: 2015-2016, Issue 10

Page 1

Record The Harvard Law

MONDAY, APRIL 11, 2016

INDEPENDENT AT HARVARD LAW SCHOOL SINCE 1946

VOLUME 4, ISSUE 10

IN THIS ISSUE:

Sarah Gitlin ’16 asks why the abortion debate at HLS is so gender-segregated , p. 3 Marlen Thaten LLM ’16 and Tess Peacock LLM ’16 exchange views on Reclaim’s Postergate response, p. 5

Bruce Fein ’72 condemns Harvard Law School’s failures of moral leadership, p. 8 Pete Davis ’18 explains what we need to do to create a moral community, p. 8

Annaleigh Curtis ’16 thinks the marketplace of ideas needs sensible regulations , p. 11 Michael Shammas ’16 makes the case for intellectual humility in current campus debates, p. 12

Gender Gaps Persist on Law Review and in Grades Data reveal significant disparities in Law Review and HLAB membership, distribution of Latin honors; Board of Student Advisors statistically even. By the Women’s Law Association

Starting in the spring semester, 1Ls are inundated with offers of lunch panels and coffee chat invitations from the two-year student organizations on campus. Membership to the Harvard Law Review, Harvard Legal Aid Bureau, and the Board of Student Advisors is highly selective and the organizations are frequently viewed as “honor societies” within the HLS community,

making them approximate measures of normative law school success. The Shatter the Ceiling Committee of the Women’s Law Association analyzed the number of men and women in each of these organizations to see whether male and female students are gaining membership to these organizations at equal rates. Of the three student groups examined, both the Harvard Law Review (“HLR”)

Harvard Law Review membership

and the Harvard Legal Aid Bureau (“HLAB”) had statistically significant deviations from the expected gender breakdown, based on the total number of male and female students in the classes of 2016 and 2017. Interestingly, the gender disparities skewed in different directions. For the classes of 2016 and 2017, HLAB had significantly

Female 36% Male 64%

For the last several weeks, the walls of the protestor-occupied “Belinda Hall” have been covered with messages from Reclaim HLS, a coalition of students seeking institutional change at the Law School. But on March 28, there was a new message — one equating the movement with Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump, claiming that both Trump and Reclaim are anti-free speech. The signs were posted by thirdyear student Bill Barlow, who has been a vocal opponent of perceived censorship by Reclaim HLS. Barlow

ANALYSIS

Gender continued on page 3

Postergate beckons coalition for change

believes some of the protestors’ demands impinge on academic freedom and stifle dissent — a conviction this incident reaffirmed for him. Shortly after Barlow taped up his signs, he sat down to discuss his message with protestors — a conversation he referred to as “tense but civil.” Later that afternoon, members from Reclaim HLS removed Barlow’s critical posters. And shortly thereafter, Barlow received an email from the Dean of Students Office requesting an informational meeting with Dean of Students Marcia Sells.

NEWS

A defense of removing posters By Duncan Kennedy

Unlike many colleagues, I do think there is a principled defense of Reclaim’s actions with respect to posters in Belinda Hall, one ­which I find persuasive, though with some reservations, which I will explain. The defense applies even to what many of the faculty seems to see as the “red line” of taking down antagonistic posters in the occupied space, and a fortiori to moving them to another space. I don’t think it is coherent to frame the issue as whether (in one colleague’s phrase) “acceptance of this situation by us, in what I take it we still regard as a public space of the law school, could be explained consistently with free-speech and common-membership principles for our school and university to which I’d assume we are all committed.” As I understand it, the occupants do not regard the space as “public” in the same way that many colleagues, do. They understand themselves to have “occupied” it. This means different things to different participants in our discussions. One meaning is a “nationalist” one that claims that the school’s property right to exclude minority protesters is morally illegitimate because the school is complicit, at least, in an overall racial regime that is morally illegitimate. This doesn’t at all mean

Posters continued on page 2 that any particular action of occupiers is OK, just that nothing is settled by the appeal to the notion of “public space.” In the nationalist version of occupation, those who have asserted this claim of moral right also claim to be entitled to regulate the space according to their own democratic procedures. This claim is parallel to “our claim” as HLS to regulate the space. “Our claim” includes all kind of

The school’s response to the occupation has created a reasonable reliance interest. rules about posting, and includes procedures for taking down posters that violate those rules. The fact that space at HLS is in some sense public does not at all at all mean that students or faculty can post anything they want anywhere they want. The Reclaim claim to a similar kind of occupier regulatory jurisdiction may strike you as absurd or evil, but it is “principled” in what I think is the common sense of the term. I have a lot of sympathy with black nationalist ideas, and always have, so long as they aren’t turned into claims of radical autonomy, without consideration of consequences for “others,” or reduce every argument to racism, as has sometimes happened to the discredit of the nationalist cause.

OPINION

Kennedy continued on page 2

By Tyra J. Walker ’18

Photo by Jim An

Reclaim HLS has put up an area in the WCC lounge to segregate posters with messages they see as “silenced” or privileged.”

The Academy and the virtue of contest By Scott Brewer

This past Wednesday evening I attended the screening of the film Bridge of Spies that Dean Minow and the Program on Negotiation hosted here at HLS. I had known nothing of the main subject of the film, James B. Donovan, a 1940 HLS alum (played in the film by Tom Hanks) who had a distinguished career as a lawyer-statesman-negotiator. Donovan’s career came to mind as I listened to conversations among some of my colleagues about the controversial contest over student use of a WCC space that some students have been, as they put it, “Reclaiming” (actually, “claiming”?), while other students (one, Mr. Barlow, has been especially prominent) have been seeking to use it to speak by means of posters even as Reclaim has sought to deny him that speech. The film made clear that Donovan was willing to champion robust advocacy, as a matter of principle, even in support of deeply unpopular causes, at personal cost and risk. As far as I can tell, the historical record of Donovan’s life seems to support the conclusion that the real-life Donovan really had and lived by these views. The Harvard Gazette summed it up this way:

professors’ “Hunting Ground” statement. By Kamilah Willingham ’11

To: Elizabeth Bartholet, Scott Brewer, Charles Donahue, Jr., Nancy Gertner, Janet Halley, Bruce L. Hay, Philip B. Heymann, David W. Kennedy, Duncan M. Kennedy, Randall L. Kennedy, Charles J. Ogletree, Jr., Richard D. Parker, J. Mark Ramseyer, David Rosenberg, Lewis D. Sargentich, David L.

Shapiro, Henry J. Steiner, Jeannie C. Suk, Laurence H. Tribe: There was no mutuality that night. The sense of entitlement to grope, mount, fondle, even penetrate — to any extent — any female body within reach that has a pulse, is not something that anyone should accept as reasonable, non-abusive, excusable behavior, even for a drunk guy. When this sense of entitlement is demonstrated, admittedly acted upon, and defended as such, it is clear that the person responsible, as well as the community he belongs to, has a serious problem. This is from my statement to

The academy should be a place where expressed views are allowed to mix it up in contests. How can you defend a foreigner who came to the United States with the likely intent of causing harm to Americans? For attorney James B. Donovan, a 1940 graduate of Harvard Law School, the real question at the height of the Cold War was: How can you not? In representing accused Soviet spy Rudolf Abel in the late 1950s, Donovan ‘probably had the most unpopular client since John Adams defended the British troops in the Boston Massacre of 1770,’ as newscaster David Brinkley put it. Donovan was no fan of communism, but he felt it was his patriotic duty to give Abel a strong defense and thereby demonstrate the

OPINION

HLS grad to former professors: do better Student condemns

Female 37% Male 63%

Reclaim HLS Removes Critical Posters in Lounge By Lindsay Church ’16

Class of 2015 Latin honors

Harvard Law School’s Administrative Board on September 19, 2011. Ten months earlier, a friend and I were sexually assaulted by one of my classmates at Harvard Law School. The Administrative Board found, by clear and convincing evidence, after months of investigation and a daylong hearing, that Brandon Winston had sexually assaulted me and my friend while we were incapable of consenting. I remember the incredible feeling of relief that washed over me when I learned of their decision: Harvard Law was a school I could Letter continued on page 5

Brewer continued on page 7

I’ve found myself in an interesting place as a black, female, first-generation law student in the midst of the socalled “Postergate” controversy. I am still processing the recent flurry of activity, but there are a few things I know, and wish to share: I support Reclaim HLS and the spirit of its mission. This first year of law school has been difficult for me, and while I hate to admit my weaknesses, particularly in such a public way, I have no doubt that some of the difficulties I’ve faced in disambiguating traditional legal reasoning have everything to do with being a first-generation law student with relatively few prior connections to the law. I’m not alone in this feeling, and it is experiential disparities like these that Reclaim is trying to address, amongst other issues. Moreover, this effort not only supports students of color, but also those from various marginalized populations.

OPINION

I’ve found myself in an interesting place as a black, female, first-generation law student. Law schools have made great strides in diversifying their populations across many facets of diversity, but they have not done nearly enough to ensure that sufficient support systems exist to deal with these demographic changes. Nor have legal curricula appropriately evolved to draw connections between legal thought and the historical contexts in which the law has been used. Although I do not support every decision Reclaim has made in the midst of Postergate (particularly the controversial claiming of jurisdiction over Belinda Hall by its plenary committee vote), I truly, deeply understand them. Walker continued on page 2

LETTER TO THE EDITOR Belinda Sutton, not Royall To the editor: The “Belinda” of “Belinda Hall” fame was named Belinda Sutton. Although she appears in her most well-known 1783 petition as “Belinda” and as “Belinda Royal” in two document in 1785, “Sutton” was her married name, as a later petition in 1788 indicates. It has long been known that enslaved people did not always take the last names of their enslavers, and many had their own last names. “Belinda Sutton” is the only name

that we can say that she, in any way, chose. Therefore, it is proper and respectful to call her by her real name. I brought this to the attention of the Royall House, and they agree wholeheartedly with me, and will use Belinda Sutton from now on. The changes are already reflected on their website. Annette Gordon-Reed is the Charles Warren Professor of American Legal History at Harvard Law School.


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