Where can a semester abroad take you?

Come talk with faculty members from the Oliver Schreiner School of Law, University of the Witwatersrand (South Africa) and the University of Geneva Faculty of Law (Switzerland), HLS students who have studied abroad, and ILS staff about the wide range of opportunities available.

The Semester Abroad Program is a wonderful opportunity for Harvard Law School students to receive a semester of ungraded credit towards the Harvard J.D. degree for study at a law school overseas. The study abroad program is intended to afford students an educational experience not available at Harvard Law School – immersion in a foreign legal culture. This includes exposure to what makes the legal system function as it does – its underlying assumptions, how local lawyers think about law, what law is designed to do, and how it relates to the society more broadly. Learn more on our Semester Abroad web page.

Applications for fall 2013 semester abroad are due February 15

A reminder that Friday, February 15 is the deadline for J.D. students to submit an application to spend the fall 2013 semester abroad. HLS has formal exchange programs in Australia, Brazil, Chile, China, France, Japan, South Africa, South Korea and Switzerland; J.D students may also conduct an independent semester abroad at law schools throughout the world.

For detailed information and application instructions, visit the semester abroad pages on our web site.

Study Abroad Coffee Hour

HLS has exchange programs with law schools around the world, and a joint degree program with the University of Cambridge, that offer students the opportunity to study abroad. What is the same, and what’s different, about legal education in other countries?  Where do students live?  What else should you know before you go?   Come meet students from these schools who are studying at HLS, and talk with them informally about these questions and more.

Representatives from our exchange partner schools in these countries will be on hand:

  • Brazil
  • France
  • South Africa
  • Switzerland
  • United Kingdom

Monday, December 3
4 p.m. – 5 p.m.
Graduate Program Lounge, Wasserstein 5053

Semester Abroad and the Joint HLS-Cambridge LL.M. Program

Harvard Law School offers several opportunities for HLS students to earn credit abroad: a joint J.D./LL.M. program in which students are able to earn both a Harvard J.D. and an LL.M. from Cambridge University in England in three-and-a-half years; a semester abroad at one of the ten foreign law schools with which HLS has an exchange program; and an independent semester abroad under the supervision of a Harvard Law School faculty member.

Join us on Monday, October 15, at noon, in Hauser 104, for an information session on these study abroad programs. Come learn more about these programs from HLS students who have studied abroad.

2012 Chayes Fellow Megumi Tsutsui (JD ’14), working with the Legal Resources Centre, South Africa

Lion's Head, Cape Town

“I’ve been working on a research report to explain general legal liability implications incurred from accidents resulting in deaths or injuries to “illegal” diggers at mines. Artisanal and small-scale mining (ASM) conducted by individuals and small organized groups occurs nearly everywhere in the world alongside large-scale mining (LSM). However, in the case of South Africa (and nearly everywhere else in the world), these miners are given little to no legal protections and rights, though they have been historically disadvantaged and negatively impacted by generous government concessions given to large-scale mining. Thus, these artisanal miners are often deemed to be “illegal,” even though their activities may be well-known and condoned by the owners of the mines.

 My report delves into two issues. First, it analyzes current South African law that governs liability of corporations and government in the case of artisanal miners suffering an accident while mining. Second, my report summarizes international best practices to regulate the ASM sector and offers recommendations for reforming policy and law in South Africa pertaining to artisanal mining. I am also helping to organize a workshop to present my paper in a mining town where artisanal miners were recently killed in an accident. Invitees include representatives from mining associations, NGOs, and relevant government departments. The workshop will explore how reform can be achieved in the specific context of the mining community.

 Aside from the very fascinating development work, I have also been able to take advantage of living in the beautiful city of Cape Town. Above is a picture of Lion’s Head, which I took on my hike up Table Mountain.”