Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Bruce Hartling Mann (born April 28, 1950) is an American legal scholar who is the Carl F. Schipper, Jr. Professor of Law at Harvard Law School, and husband of U.S. Senator Elizabeth Warren. A legal historian, his research focuses on the relationship among legal, social, and economic change in early United States. [2]

  2. Bruce H. Mann, Carl F. Schipper, Jr. Professor of Law at Harvard Law School, teaches American Legal History and Property. He has also taught as a visiting or permanent member of the faculty at the law schools of Washington University in St. Louis and the universities of Connecticut, Houston, Texas, Michigan, and Pennsylvania, and in the history ...

  3. 20 de feb. de 2020 · Warren's husband, Bruce H. Mann, is solidly by her side, and has been since long before she first entered the political arena in 1995. Mann, a law professor at Harvard, is regularly seen with...

    • Bruce Mann1
    • Bruce Mann2
    • Bruce Mann3
    • Bruce Mann4
    • Bruce Mann5
  4. 15 de may. de 2019 · Boston Globe // Getty Images. Elizabeth Warren is famous for her deep familiarity with the issues —and as a fellow law professor, her husband Bruce Mann knows his share, too. Together, they...

    • News Writer
  5. The author of On the Battlefield of Merit: Harvard Law School, the First Century, he spoke not only about Royall, a brutal slave owner whose plantation in Antigua was notorious (he kept a 500-acre farm in Medford, too), but also about the school’s connections to the Fugitive Slave Act of 1793—which most faculty members at the time strongly ...

  6. 10 de dic. de 2019 · Johnson, who commuted to work with Warren and her husband, Bruce Mann, for about six months in 1981, recalls one particularly wonky issue they would debate on their car rides: public utility...

  7. BRUCE H. MANN The articles in this issue are drawn from the papers delivered at the confer-ence “Ab Initio: Law in Early America,” held in Philadelphia on June 16–17, 2010—the first conference in nearly fifteen years to focus on law in early America. It was sponsored by the Penn Legal History