Name of the University
Harvard University
Description Of University
H arvard College was established in 1636 by vote of the Great and General Court of Massachusetts Bay Colony, and was named for its first benefactor, John Harvard of Charlestown, a young minister who upon his death in 1638, left his library and half his estate to the new institution.
Harvard University, which celebrated its 350th anniversary in 1986, is the oldest institution of higher learning in the United States. Founded 16 years after the arrival of the Pilgrims at Plymouth, the University has grown from nine students with a single master to an enrollment of more than 18,000 degree candidates, including undergraduates and students in 10 principal academic units. An additional 13,000 students are enrolled in one or more courses in the Harvard Extension School. Over 14,000 people work at Harvard, including more than 2,000 faculty. There are also 7,000 faculty appointments in affiliated teaching hospitals.
Seven presidents of the United States - John Adams, John Quincy Adams, Theodore and Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Rutherford B. Hayes, John Fitzgerald Kennedy and George W. Bush - were graduates of Harvard. Its faculty have produced more than 40 Nobel laureates.
University Website
http://www.harvard.edu/
Name of the law college
Harvard Law School
Snapshot
Brief Description of law college

The world's premier center for legal education and research, Harvard Law School provides unparalleled opportunities to study law and related disciplines in an energetic and creative learning environment.
Harvard Law School was founded in 1817. It is the oldest continuously operating law school in the United States.
Approximately 1880 students attend the School each year: 1680 J.D. students, 150 LL.M. students, and 50 S.J.D. students.
The faculty includes 84 tenured professors and tenure-track assistant professors, as well as 150 visiting professors, lecturers on law, clinical professors and instructors, and professors emeriti, who participate in 16 research and special programs.
The curriculum features more than 250 elective courses and seminars each year.
Tuition for the 2006-2007 academic year is ,100.
A Harvard Law education prepares students for success in law practice, business, public service, and teaching. Through its faculty, students, and alumni, Harvard Law School is able to contribute solutions to the world's most complex legal and social challenges. Our students come from all 50 states and more than 70 countries around the world. Most are pursuing a J.D. (Juris Doctor) degree, while many others are earning an LL.M (Master of Laws) or the S.J.D. (Doctor of Juridical Science).
Founded in 1817, Harvard Law School is the oldest existing law school in the United States (a proprietary law school at Litchfield, Connecticut was older by 33 years). Harvard's first classes in law were held in College House #2, also known as the Weber farmhouse, until Dane Hall was designed for the Law School in 1832. Austin Hall, completed in 1883, replaced Dane Hall as the center of activity and, along with Gannett House (1838) and Hastings Hall (1889), serves as a present-day reminder of the Law School's history of change and growth.
Today, approximately 1850 students, 100 faculty members, and 325 staff members work, study, or live in nineteen buildings. Eight dormitories provide housing for approximately one-third of the students; Harkness Commons serves as a student center and cafeteria; and the remaining buildings hold classrooms, library collections, offices, and study and social areas. The heart of the Law School is Langdell Hall, which houses the main library as well as faculty offices and classrooms.
Law College Website
http://www.law.harvard.edu/
Country
United States of America
Location
Harvard Law School,
1563 Massachusetts Avenue,
Cambridge, MA 02138
Telephone number: 617-495-3100.
Law Programmes Offered
Graduate Programs offered are:
S.J.D. Program
Find details at:
http://www.law.harvard.edu/academics/graduate/admissions/sjd.php
LL.M. Program
Find details at:
http://www.law.harvard.edu/academics/graduate/admissions/llm.php
Visiting Scholar and Researcher (VS/VR) Program
Find details at:
http://www.law.harvard.edu/academics/graduate/admissions/vrvs.php
Degree Programs
Harvard Law School offers three degree programs designed to meet the needs of students at various stages of their academic and professional careers.
The J.D. (Juris Doctor) degree is a three-year program that first gives students the intellectual foundations for legal study, and then gives them the opportunity to focus their studies on areas of particular interest. The program culminates with a third-year paper that requires students to engage in a rigorous exploration of some aspect of the law or legal system.
The one-year LL.M (Master of Laws) program provides students who already have excellent legal training and experience -- many have served as practicing lawyers, judges, diplomats, community leaders -- with broad latitude to design a course of study that will give them an expanded understanding of law and legal theory.
Master of Laws (LL.M.) Program
The LL.M. (Master of Laws) program is a one-year degree program that typically includes 150 students from more than 60 countries. The Graduate Program is interested in attracting intellectually curious and thoughtful candidates from a variety of legal systems and backgrounds and with various career plans. Harvard's LL.M. students include lawyers working in firms, government officials, law professors, judges, diplomats, human rights activists, doctoral students, business men and women, and others. The diversity of the participants in the LL.M. program contributes significantly to the educational experience of all students at the School.
The S.J.D. (Doctor of Juridical Science) is still a more advanced degree, intended for students who wish to pursue a career in legal education. Graduates of the S.J.D. program are teaching in the world's finest law schools and producing scholarship at the highest levels.
Harvard also offers Joint Degree Programs and opportunities to Study Abroad.
Law courses Offered
Cyber related courses -
* Antitrust, Technology, and Innovation: Seminar
* Art Law: Seminar
* Copyright
* Copyright and Other Intellectual Property
* Copyright Reform: Seminar
* Cyberlaw: Internet Points of Control
* CyberOne: Law in the Court of Public Opinion
* International Intellectual Property
* Introduction to Patents, Copyrights, and Similar Exclusive Rights Regimes
* Japanese Intellectual Property
* Patent Law
* Practical Lawyering in Cyberspace: Seminar
* Transactional Practice Clinical Workshop A
* Transactional Practice Clinical Workshop B
* Venture Capital and the Technology Start-up
* Web Difference? Digital Media, Entertainment, and the Law (The)
See detailed course list at:
http://www.law.harvard.edu/academics/courses/
Faculty
Harvard Law School is home to the world's most intellectually interesting and diverse law faculty. The eighty-one tenured and tenure-track professors of the Law School offer an almost breathtaking array of courses, seminars, and reading groups, which cover every major substantive area of legal study and approach the law from a wide variety of methodological perspectives. Each year, professors from other parts of Harvard University and other law schools around the world, as well as practicing lawyers from law firms, government, and public interest organizations, contribute their specialized skills and knowledge to this richest curriculum in the nation.
The faculty includes 84 tenured professors and tenure-track assistant professors, as well as 150 visiting professors, lecturers on law, clinical professors and instructors, and professors emeriti, who participate in 16 research and special programs.
Student Life
To provide the best possible learning environment, Harvard Law School provides its students with a wide range of services, from career counseling to medical care to information technology support. The School seeks to enhance all aspects of students' experience at the Law School.
The Dean of Students Office (DOSO) is the primary liaison between students and administration at HLS; it is the primary resource for information about student services, including those not listed on this page. The DOSO administers or provides access to programs and information concerning campus life, special academic programs, disabilities, student organizations and publications, personal and academic problems and community concerns.
Find details at:
http://www.law.harvard.edu/students/
Career Planning and Placement
Harvard Law School's Office of Career Services is committed to assisting our students and graduates in their career development. Our goal while you are in law school at Harvard is not just to help you access our network of employers and alumni, but also to give you the skills to enable you to make the most of your career while in school and after graduation.
The OCS provides a wide range of career development services for HLS students and alumni, including:
Programming
Throughout the academic year, the OCS conducts an extensive range of career-related panel discussions, presentations, receptions, and workshops covering a wide range of topics including job search nuts and bolts, substantive practice overviews, and self-assessment tools. For a full view of OCS programming, please see our Career Events Calendar.
Individual Advising
Experienced OCS Advisors are available for 20 minute individual counseling sessions with HLS students and alumni to develop personalized career strategies. Unfortunately, due to the heavy demands of the fall recruiting season, the OCS must suspend individual counseling for alumni from September through December. The OCS Advisors are all former practicing attorneys with a wide range of legal and counseling backgrounds.
Recruiting
Each year, the OCS coordinates over 10,000 interviews with over 800 employers for HLS students. These on-campus interview programs are concentrated in the fall for second and third year students and in the spring for first year students.
Website
The OCS website provides volumes of career-related advice and sample marketing materials, as well as links to important career search resources. In addition to general legal job search materials, the website provides extensive coverage of judicial clerkships, law teaching, alternative careers, legal practice areas, career transitions, and more.
Job Postings
The OCS maintains a searchable database of current legal and alternative employment opportunities across the U.S. and abroad for students and alumni.
Find details of career services at:
http://www.law.harvard.edu/ocs/
Additional Information /Special Offers
Student Financial Services
Low Income Protection Plan
Many Harvard Law School graduates devote their careers to public service work as government attorneys, human rights activists, champions of civil rights and advocates for traditionally underserved populations. Given a significant educational debt burden, such careers might not be feasible without loan repayment assistance. The Low Income Protection Plan (LIPP) was the first law school program to address this problem and remains one of the most comprehensive programs of its kind. Through LIPP, Harvard Law School is committed to preserving freedom of job choice within the legal profession for its graduates.
The plan helps relieve the burden of education loan repayment for J.D. graduates in full-time government, non-profit or academic jobs. In addition, full-time law-related jobs in the private sector are also covered under LIPP (see Eligible Jobs for definition of law-related). LIPP participants pay a limited portion of their annual income towards their annual loan repayment obligations (see Participant Contributions); LIPP then covers the remainder of their LIPP-eligible loan payments.
Graduates may enter LIPP at any time after graduation if their job, debt and income qualify, however, please note that LIPP assistance is not retroactive. We encourage all students to become familiar with the LIPP guidelines as they begin to explore their legal careers. The LIPP staff is available to counsel students and graduates about the program and other aspects of debt management.
Find details at:
http://www.law.harvard.edu/students/sfs/lipp/
Contact details for various financial help aids:
http://www.law.harvard.edu/students/sfs/contact.php
Fast Facts
Type of Law College :
Not selected
Main language used in class :
English
Course Fees :
For the class entering in 2008:
Application fee: $75.00
J.D. Program
2007-2008 Expenses:
* Tuition: $39,325
* Estimated living expenses (standard single student budget): $23,075
S.J.D Program
A year in Harvard Law School's S.J.D. program is expensive.
Regular tuition for a first-year student in 2007-2008 is $39,325;
first-year students who were eligible to and did waive the LL.M. degree pay reduced tuition of $1,000.
In addition, the costs of dormitory housing, food, medical fees, books and supplies, activity fee, and personal and travel expenses for a single student come to at least $23,097.
For the 2007-2008 academic year, the standard budget for married students calls for at least another $12,540 in living expenses for the spouse, $7,212 for the first child, and $7,116 for each additional child
Master of Laws (LL.M.) Program
A year in Harvard Law School's LL.M. program is expensive.
Tuition for 2007-2008 is $39,325;
In addition, the costs of dormitory housing, food, medical fees, books and supplies, activity fee, and personal and travel expenses for a single student come to at least $23,097, for a total of at least $62,422.
For the 2007-2008 academic year, the standard budget for married students calls for at least another $12,540 in living expenses for the spouse, $7,212 for the first child, and $7,116 for each additional child.
Boarding Cost :
J.D. Program
* Estimated living expenses (standard single student budget): $23,075
There is no seperate budget for married students, but additional expenses are subtracted from available resources in the needs-analysis calculations.
The nine-month allownce for spouse living expenses is $11,925. Allowance for children are $6,852 for the first child, $13,104 for the first child of a single parent, and $6,768 for each additional child. More information can be found on the Married Students and Students with Dependent Children Resources page at :
http://www.law.harvard.edu/students/sfs/finaid/policy/resources/married.php
S.J.D Program
The costs of dormitory housing, food, medical fees, books and supplies, activity fee, and personal and travel expenses for a single student come to at least $23,097.
For the 2007-2008 academic year, the standard budget for married students calls for at least another $12,540 in living expenses for the spouse, $7,212 for the first child, and $7,116 for each additional child
Master of Laws (LL.M.) Program
The costs of dormitory housing, food, medical fees, books and supplies, activity fee, and personal and travel expenses for a single student come to at least $23,097, for a total of at least $62,422.
For the 2007-2008 academic year, the standard budget for married students calls for at least another $12,540 in living expenses for the spouse, $7,212 for the first child, and $7,116 for each additional child.
Miscellaneous Expenses :
Information not provided
Note
Last Date Of Submission :
J.D. Program
For the class entering in 2008:
Application deadline: February 1, 2008
S.J.D Program
The deadline for submission of applications for admission to S.J.D. degree candidacy beginning in the fall of 2008 is April 1, 2008. The Graduate Program Admissions Office must receive all application materials other than recommendations by this date. The deadline for receipt of letters of recommendation is May 1, 2008.
Master of Laws (LL.M.) Program
For the LL.M. class beginning in September 2008, the application deadline for all applicants will be December 1, 2007. (We strongly encourage all applications to be delivered by November 15, 2007.)
Applications must be sent out in time for delivery to the office on or before the application deadline.
Is LSAT score required ?
For J.D Program : LSAT
You must also take the Law School Admission Test (LSAT) before the February 1 application deadline (no later than the December LSAT administration) in order for your application to be guaranteed consideration.
At no point on the GPA or LSAT scales are the chances of admission to Harvard Law School 0 or 100 percent. As reported to the ABA, the 75/25 percentile GPAs for the class entering in 2007 were 3.95/3.75 and the 75/25 percentile LSATs were 175/170.
Is TOEFL score required ?
For LLM Program : TOEFL
In addition, all applicants from non-English speaking countries or who did not receive their legal education entirely in the English language must take the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) examination within two years prior to submitting their applications. The Graduate Program requires a minimum score of 600 on the paper-based test, a minimum score of 250 on the computer-based test, or a minimum score of 100 on the internet-based test (if you take the internet-based test, you must also have a minimum score of 25 on each subsection). Applicants with at least two years of university education conducted entirely in English may request a waiver of the TOEFL exam; however, such waivers are not automatic, and are granted at the sole discretion of the Graduate Program.
Any other mandatory requirements: ?
J.D. Program
You are eligible to apply if you will have a bachelor's degree by August of the year you intend to enroll at HLS. You must also take the Law School Admission Test (LSAT) before the February 1 application deadline (no later than the December LSAT administration) in order for your application to be guaranteed consideration.
The J.D. degree requires three years of full-time study, and new students begin their studies only in the fall semester each year. Apart from continuing legal education for practicing lawyers, we have no part-time or summer programs.
S.J.D Program
Harvard Law School admits approximately 12 to 15 applicants to S.J.D. candidacy each year. Students who have not received an LL.M. degree from Harvard or another leading U.S. law school are virtually never admitted to S.J.D. candidacy. Students who have received an LL.M. degree from another leading U.S. law school are only rarely admitted directly to S.J.D. candidacy. Applicants interested in the S.J.D. program ordinarily must first apply to and successfully complete the Harvard Law School LL.M. program. Successful completion of the Harvard Law School LL.M. program does not, however, guarantee admission into the S.J.D. program.
Master of Laws (LL.M.) Program
To be considered for the LL.M. Program, an applicant must have a J.D. (Juris Doctor) from an accredited U.S. law school or a first law degree (J.D., LL.B. or the equivalent) from a foreign law school. Harvard Law School is rarely able to accept into its LL.M. Program anyone who already holds or is pursuing an LL.M. or equivalent degree from another law school in the United States.
TOEFL
In addition, all applicants from non-English speaking countries or who did not receive their legal education entirely in the English language must take the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) examination within two years prior to submitting their applications. The Graduate Program requires a minimum score of 600 on the paper-based test, a minimum score of 250 on the computer-based test, or a minimum score of 100 on the internet-based test (if you take the internet-based test, you must also have a minimum score of 25 on each subsection). Applicants with at least two years of university education conducted entirely in English may request a waiver of the TOEFL exam; however, such waivers are not automatic, and are granted at the sole discretion of the Graduate Program.
Contact Information
Email Address for Enquiries:
Graduate Programs(for those who already hold a degree in Law)
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J.D Program
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Contact Address for Admission:
Admissions, Graduate Program
(for those who already hold a degree in Law)
617-496-8214
617-496-9179 (fax)
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Admissions, J.D. Program
617-495-3109
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Find details at:
http://www.law.harvard.edu/administration/directory.php
Scholarship Information
Scholarship Offered:
PartTime Job Oppurtunities:
Other Scholarship information:
Last update : 26-11-2007 17:58
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