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H-Sites: Harvard Life and Learning

Collected by: Harvard University Archives

Archived since: Mar, 2015

Description:

As part of its mission to document Harvard University, the Harvard University Archives has collected across several centuries thousands of personal archives of individuals and records of organizations affiliated with the University, including faculty, students, and clubs. Many of these materials are now created on web sites. The purpose of H-Sites: Harvard Life and Learning is to collect and make accessible this web-based material. As it grows, the H-Sites collection will document the intellectual and social interests of a segment of the community of people who live, work, and learn at Harvard: primarily faculty and students, but also, occasionally, visiting scholars and staff. Their lives both inside and outside of classrooms and offices are an integral part of Harvard's culture and history. HOLLIS catalog: http://id.lib.harvard.edu/alma/990132517800203941/catalog

Subject:   Universities & Libraries Harvard University

Page 1 of 1 (15 Total Results)

Title: Molly Brady Twitter feed

URL: https://twitter.com/mollyxbrady/

Description: Molly (Maureen E.) Brady is a professor of law at Harvard Law School, where she teaches property law and related subjects. Her scholarship uses historical analyses of property institutions and land use doctrines to explore broader theoretical questions. Her current research projects involve the relationship between covenants and zoning, the persistence of community knowledge in property doctrine, and state constitutional takings law. Previously, Professor Brady taught at the University of Virginia School of Law. Professor Brady received an AB summa cum laude in history from Harvard College, where she was elected to Phi Beta Kappa and was awarded the Harvard-Radcliffe Foundation for Women's Athletics Prize for the top female scholar-athlete. Professor Brady obtained her JD from Yale Law School. Professor Brady's Twitter feed features commentary on property institutions, land use, private law, and eminent domain. Collected by the Harvard University Archives as part of the personal archive of Maureen E. Brady.

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Title: Rebecca Tushnet's 43(B)log

URL: https://tushnet.blogspot.com/

Description: Rebecca Tushnet is the Frank Stanton Professor of the First Amendment at Harvard Law School. After clerking for Chief Judge Edward R. Becker of the Third Circuit and Associate Justice David H. Souter on the Supreme Court, she practiced intellectual property law at Debevoise & Plimpton before beginning teaching. Her areas of interest are intellectual property (including copyright, advertising, and trademark law) and technology law and policy. Professor Tushnet helped found the Organization for Transformative Works, a nonprofit dedicated to supporting and promoting fanworks, and currently volunteers on its legal committee. She is also an expert on the law of engagement rings. Professor Tushnet's 43(B)log contains commentary on legal cases regarding United States trademarks and associated topics. Collected by the Harvard University Archives as part of the personal archive of Rebecca Tushnet.

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Title: Devah Pager

URL: https://scholar.harvard.edu/pager/home

Description: Devah Pager (1972-2018) was the Peter and Isabel Malkin Professor of Sociology and Public Policy at Harvard University. She directed the Multidiscipinary Program in Inequality and Social Policy. Her work in measuring and documenting race bias in the labor market is widely considered to be ground-breaking. Her personal website on the OpenScholar platform contains her curriculum vitae and a list of publications. Collected by the Harvard University Archives as part of the personal archive of Devah Pager.

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Title: Roy P. Mottahedeh

URL: https://scholar.harvard.edu/mottahedeh/home

Description: American historian Roy Parviz Mottahedeh (1940- ; Harvard AB 1960, PhD 1970), an expert on Iranian culture, is Gurney Professor of History, Emeritus at Harvard University where he taught courses on the pre-modern social and intellectual history of the Islamic Middle East. Mottahedeh served as the director of Harvard's Center for Middle Eastern Studies from 1987 to 1990, and as the inaugural director of the Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal Islamic Studies Program at Harvard University from 2006 to 2011. Professor Mottahedeh's website provides information on his life and career, publications, reviews, and the Law, Loyalty and Leadership event organized in his honor in 2012. Collected by the Harvard University Archives as part of the personal archive of Roy P. Mottahedeh.

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Title: Michael D. Jackson

URL: https://scholar.harvard.edu/michaeljackson/home

Description: Michael D. Jackson, anthropologist and creative writer, is a Senior Research Fellow in World Religions at Harvard Divinity School. Prior to his retirement from active teaching in 2022, he was Distinguished Professor of World Religions at Harvard Divinity School. He is a multiple-award winner as a poet and is a pioneer in the field of existential anthropology. In addition to his positions at Harvard Divinity School, he has held teaching positions at a number of schools in Australia, Denmark, the United States, and his native new Zealand. Collected by the Harvard University Archives as part of the personal archive of Michael D. Jackson.

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Title: Kenneth W. Mack

URL: https://scholar.harvard.edu/kennethmack/home

Description: Kenneth W. Mack is the inaugural Lawrence D. Biele Professor of Law and Affiliate Professor of History at Harvard University. He is also the co-faculty leader of the Harvard Law School Program on Law and History. In 2007, he was named a Fletcher Fellow by the Fletcher Foundation. He has served as the co-director of the Workshops on “The History of Capitalism in the Americas” (2015-16) and “The Long Civil Rights Movement” (2008-09) at the Charles Warren Center for Studies in American History at Harvard University. He has taught at Harvard, Stanford, and Georgetown Universities, and the University of Hawai’i, and has served as Senior Visiting Scholar, Centre for History and Economics at Cambridge University. In 2016, President Obama appointed him to the Permanent Committee for the Oliver Wendell Holmes Devise. He is also a member of the American Law Institute. He began his professional career as an electrical engineer at Bell Laboratories before turning to law, and history. Before joining the faculty at Harvard Law School, he clerked for the Honorable Robert L. Carter, in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, and practiced law in the Washington, D.C. office of the firm, Covington & Burling. Professor Mack's website provides information on his career, books, articles, essays, lectures, and courses. The site also provides external links (not captured here) to his opinion pieces, reviews, and interviews. Collected by the Harvard University Archives as part of the personal archive of Kenneth W. Mack.

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Title: Jacob K. Olupona

URL: https://scholar.harvard.edu/jacobolupona/home

Description: Jacob K. Olupona is a scholar of indigenous African religions. He has appointments at Harvard as Professor of African Religious Traditions at Harvard Divinity School and Professor of African and African American Studies in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences. His research ranges across African religious traditions as well as the impact of those traditions in the United States. Olupona has won a number of awards, including the Nigerian National Order of Merit, the Martin E. Marty Award for the Public Understanding of Relition, and was a Walter Channing Cabot Fellow at Harvard. Collected by the Harvard University Archives as part of the personal archive of Jacob K. Olupona.

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Title: Ezra F. Vogel

URL: https://scholar.harvard.edu/ezravogel/home

Description: Ezra Vogel (1930-2020) was an American sociologist whose research focused on modern Japan, China, and Korea. Vogel received his Harvard PhD in 1958 and taught at Yale before returning to Harvard in 1964; he retired from teaching in 2000 as Henry Ford II Professor of the Social Sciences. Vogel served in many administrative roles at the University, including founding director of the Asia Center (1997-1999) and director of the Fairbank Center for Chinese Studies (1973-1975 and 1995-1999). Collected by the Harvard University Archives as part of the personal archive of Ezra F. Vogel.

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Title: David D. Hall

URL: https://projects.iq.harvard.edu/davidhall/home

Description: David D. Hall, the Bartlett Professor of New England Church History Emeritus at Harvard Divinity School, is a leading scholar of 17th Century New England Religion, and especially of the sociological aspects of it. He has taught at Harvard Divinity School since 1989. Prior to that, he held appointments at Yale, Boston University, and the Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales in Paris. He has had many honors and fellowships, including a Senior Fellowship at the National Endowment for the Humanities, a Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship, the Merle Curti Prize from the Organization of American Historians, and the Philip Schaff Prize from the American Society for Church History. Professor Hall's website provides information on his professional life, publications, and teaching. Collected by the Harvard University Archives as part of the personal archive of David D. Hall.

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Title: Noah Feldman

URL: https://noah-feldman.com/

Description: Noah Feldman is the Felix Frankfurter Professor of Law, Chairman of the Society of Fellows, and founding director of the Julis-Rabinowitz Program on Jewish and Israeli Law, all at Harvard University. He specializes in constitutional studies, with particular emphasis on power and ethics, design of innovative governance solutions, law and religion, and the history of legal ideas. Before joining the Harvard faculty, Feldman was Cecelia Goetz Professor of Law at New York University School of Law. He was named a Carnegie Scholar in 2005. In 2004 he was a visiting professor at Yale Law School and a fellow of the Whitney Humanities Center. In 2003 he served as senior constitutional advisor to the Coalition Provisional Authority in Iraq, and advised members of the Iraqi Governing Council on the drafting of the Transitional Administrative Law or interim constitution. He served as a law clerk to Justice David H. Souter of the U.S. Supreme Court (1998 – 1999). Selected as a Rhodes Scholar, he earned a D. Phil. in Islamic Thought from Oxford University and a J.D. from Yale Law School, serving as Book Reviews Editor of the Yale Law Journal. He received his A.B. summa cum laude in Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations from Harvard University in 1992, finishing first in his class. Professor Feldman's website provides information on his background, books, consulting, podcasts, and Bloomberg articles. Collected by the Harvard University Archives as part of the personal archive of Noah Feldman.

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Title: Bernard Gottschalk : Talks, Papers, and Software

URL: https://github.com/BernardGottschalk/BG-distribution/

Description: Bernard Gottschalk (1935-2021) was a German-American physicist. Gottschalk received his PhD in 1962 from the Harvard Cyclotron Laboratory, used for physics research and after 1961, one of only 20 centers worldwide to specialize in proton-beam therapy. After working at Fermilab and Cern, he held a professorship at Northeastern University from 1965 until 1981. Gottschalk then returned to Harvard and joined the proton therapy group at the Harvard Cyclotron Laboratory as senior research fellow. He remained an active collaborator after the Cyclotron was retired in 2002. Gottschalk researched the basic physics of protons traversing media at therapy energies and developed software to compute energy loss and scattering which was used to model beamline transport and design double scattering systems. Professor Gottschalk's Github site served as a repository of his talks, papers, and software. The site also contains his description of the site and some of the contents. Collected by the Harvard University Archives as part of the personal archive of Bernard Gottschalk.

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Title: Drew Gilpin Faust

URL: https://drewfaust.com/

Description: Drew Gilpin Faust (1947- ) served as the 28th president of Harvard University from 2007 to 2018, the first woman in that role and the first Harvard president since 1672 without an undergraduate or graduate degree from Harvard. Faust received her bachelor’s degree in history from Bryn Mawr College in 1968, and her master’s degree and doctorate in American Civilization from the University of Pennsylvania in 1971 and 1975. For 25 years, Faust was Professor of History at the University of Pennsylvania, before becoming the founding Dean for the Radcliffe Institute at Harvard in 2001. As dean, Faust worked to expand the institute into a wide-ranging multidisciplinary focus and creative enterprise that explored new knowledge in traditional fields. As Harvard president, Faust was known for expanding financial aid access across Harvard College, advocating for increased federal funding for scientific research, returning the ROTC to Harvard campus, and overseeing a record breaking $9 million capital campaign. Needs bio note here. Professor Faust's website provides information on lectures, speeches, publications, events, news, and her career. Collected by the Harvard University Archives as part of the personal archive of Drew Gilpin Faust.

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Title: Robert Darnton : A Literary Tour de France

URL: http://www.robertdarnton.org/

Description: Robert Darnton was educated at Harvard University (A.B., 1960) and Oxford University (B.Phil., 1962; D. Phil., 1964), where he was a Rhodes scholar. After a brief stint as a reporter for The New York Times, he became a junior fellow in the Society of Fellows at Harvard. He taught at Princeton from 1968 until 2007, when he became Carl H. Pforzheimer University Professor and Director of the University Library at Harvard. A Literary Tour de France offers an opportunity to explore the world of books on the eve of the French Revolution, bringing together material from the archives of the Société typographique de Neuchâtel, a publisher and wholesaler who provided all kinds of books to all parts of France from 1769 to 1789.

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Title: Richard Wilson

URL: http://wilsonweb.physics.harvard.edu/

Description: British-American physicist Richard Wilson (April 29, 1926-May 19, 2018) was Mallinckrodt Professor of Physics at Harvard. He joined Harvard University in 1961 as a physics professor and spent the next thirty years at Harvard focusing on nuclear and elementary particle physics. At Harvard he was a supporter of the Cambridge Electron Accelerator and the use of the Harvard Cyclotron for proton therapy for the treatment of cancer. Professor Wilson's website provides biographical information and information on science and the law, appearances at public hearings, publications, lectures, and the history of the Harvard University Cyclotrons. The site also includes his c.v. and personal photos. Collected by the Harvard University Archives as part of the personal archive of Richard Wilson. TECHNICAL NOTE: Some of the links within this site go to pages on "physics.harvard.edu/~wilson" (and minor variations on that form). These links did not work at the time the website was acquired by the Archives. However, all were captured and can be accessed by replacing "https://physics.harvard.edu/~wilson" with "http://wilsonweb.physics.harvard.edu".

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Title: Dorothy Shore Zinberg

URL: http://dorothyzinberg.com/

Description: Dorothy Shore Zinberg (1917 -2020) was an American sociologist and biochemist. A founding member of the Kennedy School’s Center for Science and International Affairs (re-endowed in 1997 as the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs), Dorothy first came to Harvard as a research assistant and then a graduate student in biochemistry in the early 1950s. She received her PhD in the social science of medicine at Harvard in 1966 and taught in Harvard’s sociology department before becoming a lecturer in public policy at the Kennedy School. Dorothy Ginsberg's website provides biographical information, editorials and blog posts written by Dr. Ginsberg, video of her speaking, and her bibliography. Collected by the Harvard University Archives as part of the personal archive of Dorothy Shore Zinberg.

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Page 1 of 1 (15 Total Results)