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Professor Alan M. Dershowitz of
Harvard Law School has been
described by Newsweek as "the
nation's most peripatetic civil
liberties lawyer and one of its most
distinguished defenders of
individual rights." Time magazine,
in addition to including him in the
cover story on the "50 Faces for the
Future," called him a "legal star"
and "the top lawyer of last resort
in the country—a sort of judicial
St. Jude." Business Week described
him as "a feisty civil libertarian
and one of the nation's most
prominent legal educators." >>>Book
Lawyer Alan Dershowitz for Your Event
Dershowitz, who has been
characterized as a "public
intellectual par excellence," has
been a pioneer in making the legal
profession accessible to the general
public. He was the first law
professor to write regularly for the
New York Times in its Week in
Review, op-ed and Book Review
sections. He was also the first to
appear regularly on Nightline, The
McNeil-Lehrer NewsHour, Firing Line,
Larry King Live, Today, and Geraldo
Rivera. Rivera has called him "[B]eyond
a doubt… the smartest lawyer I
know." Buckley has described him as
a "deeply thoughtful man," "a master
of the law," and "a masterful
advocate."
Dershowitz is the author of 20
non-fiction works and two novels.
His writing has been praised by
Truman Capote, Saul Bellow, William
Styron, David Mamet, Aharon
Appelfeld, A.B. Yehoshua, Elie
Wiesel, Richard North Patterson, and
Henry Louis Gates, Jr. More than a
million of his books have been sold
worldwide.
Dershowitz has been interviewed by
most major television and radio
shows. He has been featured on the
covers of several magazines,
including The American Bar
Association Journal, New York
Magazine, The Jerusalem Report,
California Lawyer and Newsday. He
has also been interviewed by
numerous American magazines and
newspapers such as the New York
Times, Wall Street Journal,
Washington Post, U.S News & World
Report, Playboy, and Boston
Magazine, as well as by the foreign
news media throughout the world. He
is regularly invited to write
commentaries for the editorial page
of the Wall Street Journal, Los
Angeles Times, New York Times, and
other newspapers. He has also
published hundreds of articles in
magazines and journals. He has
written more than 1,000 op-ed
articles. His essay "Shouting Fire"
was selected for inclusion in The
Best American Essays of 1990 and has
been reprinted dozens of times, as
has been an earlier essay entitled
"Psychiatry in the Legal Process: A
Knife that Cuts Both Ways." For two
years, he hosted a radio talk show
about the law, for which he received
the 1996 Freedom of Speech Award
from the National Association of
Radio Talk Show Hosts.
Over
the course of his 35-year career as
a lawyer, Dershowitz has won more
than 100 cases—a remarkable record
for a part-time litigator who
handles primarily criminal appeals,
which generally have a very low rate
of reversal. Dershowitz takes half
of his cases on a pro bono basis and
continues to represent numerous
indigent defendants and causes. In
the summer of 2003, he participated
in a highly praised televised mock
trial of Pete Rose on ESPN. He has
been a consultant to several
presidential commissions and has
testified before congressional
committees on numerous occasions,
including as a witness against
President Clinton's impeachment. He
has advised presidents, United
Nations officials, prime ministers,
governors, senators, and members of
Congress as well as business leaders
about legal and political issues. He
has also represented and consulted
with major media companies on
free-speech issues. He helped obtain
the largest fee in history for
lawyers against the cigarette
industry. >>>Book
Lawyer Alan Dershowitz for Your Event
In
1983, the Anti-Defamation League of
B'nai B'rith presented him with the
William O. Douglas First Amendment
Award for his "compassionate
eloquent leadership and persistent
advocacy in the struggle for civil
and human rights." In presenting the
award, Nobel Laureate Elie Wiesel
said: "If there had been a few
people like Alan Dershowitz during
the 1930s and 1940s, the history of
European Jewry might have been
different." Rabbi Irving Greenberg
included Dershowitz, along with
Wiesel, as prime examples of
"modern-day rabbis" who teach Torah
in a secular context. The New York
Criminal Bar Association honored
Dershowitz for his "outstanding
contribution as a scholar and
dedicated defender of human rights."
The Lawyers' Club of San Francisco
has honored him as a "Legend of the
Law," and the Atlanta Bar
Association included him in the
category of legal "superstar." NBC
selected Dershowitz as a participant
on the American team to debate a
trio of Soviet representatives on a
nationally televised confrontation,
and after the debate, William
Buckley proposed the American team
for Medals of Freedom.
Alan
Dershowitz was born in Brooklyn,
graduated from Yeshiva University
High School and Brooklyn College. At
Yale Law School, he graduated first
in his class and served as
editor-in-chief of the Yale Law
Journal. After clerking for Chief
Judge David Bazelon and Justice
Arthur Goldberg, he was appointed to
the Harvard Law School faculty at
age 25 and became a full professor
at age 28, the youngest in the
school's history. Since that time,
he has taught courses in criminal
law, psychiatry and law,
constitutional litigation, civil
liberties and violence, comparative
criminal law, legal ethics, human
rights, the Bible and justice, great
trials, neurobiology and the law,
and a collaborative philosophy
course called "Thinking About
Thinking."
Dershowitz has lectured throughout
the country and around the world to
more than a million people - from
Carnegie Hall to the Kremlin. In
1979 he was awarded a Guggenheim
Fellowship for his work in human
rights. In 1981 he was invited to
China as a guest of the government
to lecture and consult on their
criminal code. He returned in 2001
to lecture to lawyers and law
students. In 1987 he was named the
John F. Kennedy-Fulbright Lecturer
and toured New Zealand University
lecturing about the Bill of Rights.
In 1988 he served as Visiting
Professor of Law at the Hebrew
University in Jerusalem and lectured
in Israel on civil liberties during
times of crisis. In 1990 he was
invited to Moscow to lecture on
human rights, and the following year
was selected as a Father of the Year
and a recipient of the Golden Plate
Award. At Harvard, he is currently
the Felix Frankfurter Professor of
Law, a chair established in honor of
the great justice's work in
constitutional law. Dershowitz has
been awarded honorary degrees and
medals by Yeshiva University,
Syracuse University, Hebrew Union
College, the University of Haifa,
Monmouth College, Fitchburg College
and Brooklyn College. He has been
active in the American Civil
Liberties Union, and the
Anti-Defamation League of B'nai
B'rith.
He is
married to Carolyn Cohen, a Ph.D. in
psychology. He has three children,
one of whom is a film producer,
another a lawyer with the National
Basketball Association and the
Women's National Basketball
Association, and the third was
recently bat mitzvahed. Dershowitz
was a varsity basketball player in
high school and continues to play,
regularly attends Boston Celtics
home games, and occasionally
comments on the Boston sports scene.
He has even been the subject of two
New Yorker cartoons, a New York
Times crossword puzzle and a Trivial
Pursuit question.
>>>Book
Lawyer Alan Dershowitz for Your Event
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