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Harvard Law (School) Waives Nondiscrimination Pledge for Military Recruiters
Krista-Ann Staley, Jurist News, Wednesday, September 21, 2005 at 1:36 PM ET
(JURIST NEWS)
Harvard Law School (official website) will open its career services office to military recruiters beginning this fall, despite the Pentagon's refusal to sign the school's nondiscrimination pledge,
Dean Elena Kagan (official profile) said Tuesday(, September 20, 2005) in a
letter (text) to the law school community. According to Kagan, the Pentagon notified the University it would withhold federal grants, from which Harvard receives more than $400 million per year, under the
Solomon Amendment (text) if the school continued to bar the Pentagon from the office. The military has traditionally not been allowed to recruit within the law school because the military's
"don't ask don't tell" policy (text) violates the school's nondiscrimination policy, but the Solomon Amendment allows the US Defense Secretary to block federal grants to "institutions of higher learning that prevent ROTC access or military recruiting on campus." The Pentagon
announced last week (Federal Register notice) that
New York Law School (official website) is also ineligible for federal funds because of the institution's prohibition on military recruitment on campus and a Pentagon spokeswoman has also named
Vermont Law School (official website) and
William Mitchell College of Law (official website) as being in violation of the (Solomon) Amendment and potentially facing loss of federal funding.
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit
suspended enforcement (court opinion, pdf format, Adobe required) of the Solomon Amendment last year in a case brought by a group of law students and professors against Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, stating it "requires law schools to express a message that is incompatible with their educational objective," thus violating the school's rights to free speech. The
U.S. Supreme Court agreed to hear the case (Duke Law School, backgrounder) in May (2005) and oral arguments are scheduled for December (2005). A group of over 40 Harvard faculty members announced Wednesday(, September 21, 2005) that they have filed an
amicus brief (pdf format, Adobe required) in the case. The
Harvard Crimson has
more. Inside Higher Ed has
additional coverage.
. . . more at
http://jurist.law.pitt.edu/paperchase/2005/09/harvard-law-waives-nondiscrimination.php.