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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. -- Kenneth Mack of Harvard Law School will present
the Hugo L. Black Lecture on “The Relationship between the
Legal Realist and Civil Rights Movements” at The University
of Alabama School of Law on
Thursday, Oct. 30.
The lecture will be held at 1 p.m. in the Moot Court room; it is
open to the public.
Mack received a bachelor’s degree, magna cum laude, in electrical
engineering from Drexel University (1987), a J.D., cum laude, from
Harvard Law School (1991), and a master’s in history from
Princeton University (1996). While in law school, he served as executive
editor of the Harvard Law Review.
Following graduation, Mack clerked for Judge Robert L. Carter of
the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York (1991-92)
and was an associate with Covington & Burling in Washington,
D.C. (1992-94). His research interests include civil rights history,
history of the legal profession, and race, identity and the law.
Mack’s publications have appeared in the Cornell Law Review,
Law and Social Inquiry, and the Harvard Law Review.
He has served as assistant professor of law at Harvard since 2000.
The University of Alabama established the Hugo L. Black Lecture
in 1996 to honor one of its most distinguished alumni, former United
States Supreme Court Justice Hugo L. Black, a member of the law
class of 1906. Memorabilia and papers from Justice Black’s
long and distinguished career are held in the special collections
of the Law School’s Bounds Law Library. The library also houses
a replica of Black’s study containing more than 1,000 volumes
from his personal library and other memorabilia donated by the Black
family.
For more information, contact Jennifer McCracken in the UA Law
School at jmccrack@law.ua.edu
or 205/348-5195.
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