Accomplishments & Accolades

Fall 2002

Accomplishments & Accolades

HAN members tend to possess strong opinions and a desire to share them. Thankfully, they are also a liberty-loving crew, helping to promote and provoke discussions of freedom and its implications—especially, of late, on the web. Visit the websites or online columns of your fellow HAN members for their thoughts on current events, legal questions, life as a clerk in Alaska, and a host of other topics.

The Volokh Conspiracy

volokh.blogspot.com
Run by Alexander "Sasha" Volokh (LSC 01, Harvard Law), his brother and friends, the Volokh Conspiracy offers running commentary on current events, popular culture, legal news and views, and much more.

Ex Parte

fedsoc.blogspot.com
Ex Parte is a weblog for the Harvard Federalist Society, maintained by Austin Bramwell (LSC 01, Harvard Law)—when he’s not busy writing for First Things, National Review, and the Weekly Standard.

Brainwash

www.americasfuture.org/brainwash.cfm
James N. Markels (LSC 02, George Mason University Law) writes a monthly column for Brainwash, the online magazine published by America’s Future Foundation. Recent topics include the New Jersey Senate race and "living constitutionalism."

The Most Important Site on the Internet—Ever

www.lanemcfadden.net
The personal weblog of Ninth Circuit law clerk Lane McFadden (LSC 00) serves up commentary on everything from pop culture to politics—with a dash of humor.


HAN Member Exemplifies the Pro Bono Spirit

Special thanks to HAN member Michael D. Dean (Policy Activist Conference 94), a solo practitioner in Waukesha, Wisc., who regularly donates his time and talents to defending individuals whose rights are threatened by government intrusion. In May, Mike presented oral arguments before the Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit in Doe v. Heck, defending the Fourth Amendment rights of parents and a private school subject to unreasonable searches by social workers. He recently filed a similar case in Lansing, Mich. Mike also filed an amicus brief on behalf of the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press in Osborn v. Board of Regents, the Center for Equal Opportunity’s successful suit asking the University of Wisconsin to disclose admission data critical to investigating the effects of affirmative action.


 
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