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COAST-TO-COAST: Kramer hails
from NYU.
News Service |
Larry Kramer, associate
dean for research and academics and professor of law
at New York University, has been named dean of the School
of Law. He succeeds Kathleen Sullivan, who will take
a one-year sabbatical and then serve as inaugural director
of the Stanford Center on Constitutional Law.
“You’re sitting in one of the world’s
greatest universities,” Kramer told Stanford in
a telephone interview. “Law is a completely interdisciplinary
subject, so we should take advantage of it in all the
ways that make sense for students and scholars. I’m
interested in joint degree programs, co-teaching and
jointly authored scholarship.”
A 1984 honors graduate of the University of Chicago
Law School, Kramer, 45, clerked for Judge Henry J. Friendly
of the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals and for U.S.
Supreme Court Justice William J. Brennan. He has also
taught at Chicago and at the University of Michigan
Law School.
Kramer is the fourth consecutive constitutional law
scholar to lead Stanford Law School. He says he likely
will teach classes in civil procedure and constitutional
law, but not in his first year on the job.
Noting that the bolstering of the school’s clinical
law programs “should be remembered as one of the
important aspects of Kathleen’s legacy,”
Kramer says the important question today is “not
so much what other clinics we should have, but what
should we make our clinics into.” Stanford, he
says, is in “a remarkably good position, starting
on a cleaner slate than most. We can use experience
to build the best—not the biggest, but the best
programs.”
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