Study Abroad Coffee Hour

HLS has exchange programs with law schools around the world, and a joint degree program with the University of Cambridge, that offer students the opportunity to study abroad. What is the same, and what’s different, about legal education in other countries?  Where do students live?  What else should you know before you go?   Come meet students from these schools who are studying at HLS, and talk with them informally about these questions and more.

Representatives from our exchange partner schools in these countries will be on hand:

  • Brazil
  • France
  • South Africa
  • Switzerland
  • United Kingdom

Monday, December 3
4 p.m. – 5 p.m.
Graduate Program Lounge, Wasserstein 5053

Information Session: Semester Abroad in France

The Institut d’Études Politiques de Paris (known as “Sciences Po”) was established in 1872 and is one of France’s most selective and highly regarded universities. Sciences Po Law School was created in order to train lawyers with an emphasis on critical thinking and creativity, as well as to equip them to play leadership roles in the worlds of law and business.  The law school’s main areas of academic focus include economic law, the law of globalization, and legal theory.

On Wednesday, October 24, come learn about spending a semester abroad under the HLS exchange program with Sciences Po Law School. Christophe Jamin, Dean of the Sciences Po Law School, Edith Chabre, the school’s Executive Director, students who have studied there, and International Legal Studies Staff will share first-hand experience and answer questions.

This information session will begin at 12 p.m., in the Graduate Program Lounge, Wasserstein 5053.

Semester Abroad and the Joint HLS-Cambridge LL.M. Program

Harvard Law School offers several opportunities for HLS students to earn credit abroad: a joint J.D./LL.M. program in which students are able to earn both a Harvard J.D. and an LL.M. from Cambridge University in England in three-and-a-half years; a semester abroad at one of the ten foreign law schools with which HLS has an exchange program; and an independent semester abroad under the supervision of a Harvard Law School faculty member.

Join us on Monday, October 15, at noon, in Hauser 104, for an information session on these study abroad programs. Come learn more about these programs from HLS students who have studied abroad.

Frédérique Couture-Carrier (JD ’14), 2012 Chayes Fellow, on her work with the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe, France

“My internship with the Council of Europe’s Committee on Legal Affairs and Human Rights this summer is absolutely marvelous, and my supervisor, coworkers, and fellow interns are from all over the world, speak multiple languages, and are wonderful to work with. I am learning a great deal about international human rights law and how countries execute (or not) the European Court of Human Rights’ judgments. I spend most of my time writing, editing, and translating reports, but I’ve also been able to sit in on both the Committee of Ministers’ and the Parliamentary Assembly’s sessions this summer. While the reports I work on are entirely based on facts and law, it has been unbelievable to see how the different states interact with one another at the sessions and how political the discussions become.”

2011 Chayes Fellow Elizabeth Freedman (JD ’13) on her summer position with the Council of Europe in France

“My summer here has been an interesting, eye-opening experience. The general European baseline perspective on human and civil rights varies significantly from that of the US and Latin America–and is often more liberal in affording positive freedoms than we are…I spent the first week of my internship attending a meeting of the Committee of Ministers, Subcommittee of Experts on the Reform of the Court. I listened to representatives from each country and the Registry of the Court debate different proposals. The following weeks were spent meeting with the Legal Affairs and Human Rights Secretariat, and conducting interviews with various judges from the European Court of Human Rights, Registry lawyers and members of the Committee of Ministers Secretariat…Although it is frustrating to have to navigate around such diverse interests from each State Party, as well as the fragmented Council of Europe bodies, I have hope that the end result of my work will actually help to bring some change, and allow the Court and the Council as a whole to function more effectively and efficiently.”