MARY ANN GLENDON (PRESIDENT)
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Date of Birth: 7 October 1938
Place: Pittsfield, MA (USA)
Nomination: 19 January 1994
Field: Law
Title: Professor
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Institute Address:
Harvard University Law School, Hauser Hall 504, 1575 Massachusetts Avenue,
Cambridge, MA 02138 (USA)
Most important awards, prizes and academies
US Ambassador to the Holy See, 2008-09; Dr. Honoris Causa: University of Chicago, Université
Catholique de Louvain, Catholic University, Brigham Young University, Boston College, College of the Holy Cross, Seton Hall University, Assumption College,
Notre Dame, St. John's University, University of Navarra. Prizes: Order of the Coif Triennial Book Award; Scribes Award for Legal Writing, 2003
Bradley Foundation Prize; National Humanities Medal, 2005; Premio Capalbio, 2008; Premio Internazionale Capri San Michele, 2008. Member:
International Academy of Comparative Law, American Academy of Arts and Sciences, President of the Pontifical Academy of Social Sciences; US National Bioethics
Council 2000-04.
Summary of scientific research
The main theme of my research has been a continuing investigation of how the legal systems of various
North Atlantic nations handle a broad range of contemporary problems. Building on the work of my teacher Max Rheinstein who was a student and
translator of Max Weber, I employ sociological and legal methods to explore the interaction among law, behavior, and ideas. My earliest works (1970s)
traced the relationships between changes in family property law and changes in the family's role as a determinant of economic security and social standing
in modern societies. I later extended those inquiries to comparative labour law, constitutional law, and the legal profession. After a period of writing on
comparative law and method, I undertook a cross-national study in the 1980s of abortion and divorce in 20 countries, revealing the uniqueness of the United
States' legal approach to those phenomena. I then undertook a more general comparative study of the idea of "rights" and the "language" of rights. Currently,
the main areas of research concern international human rights, and the relations between law and political philosophy. That work has numerous intersections
with Catholic social thought (mediating groups, subsidiarity).
Main publications
Books: Verso un mondo nuovo (2009); Traditions in Turmoil (2006), winner of the 2008 International Prize Capri San Michele;
A World Made New: Eleanor Roosevelt and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (Random House, 2001); Comparative Legal Traditions, 3rd ed.
(with Paolo Carozza) (West Publishing Co., 2007); A Nation Under Lawyers (Farrar, Straus, & Giroux, 1994); Rights Talk: The Impoverishment of Political
Discourse, Free Press, 1991; The Transformation of Family Law: State, Law, and Family in the United States and Western Europe, University of Chicago Press,
1989. (Successor volume to Glendon, State, Law and Family, 1977). Winner of the Order of the Coif Triennial Book Award, 1993; Abortion and Divorce in
Western Law, Harvard University Press, 1987. Winner of the 1988 Scribes Book Award of the American Society of Writers on Legal Subjects; The New Family and
the New Property, Butterworths, 1981. Articles, Book Chapters, etc.: "Cicero is a Superstar", First Things, Jan. 2010, at 17; "Plato as Statesman",
First Things, Nov. 2007, at 29; "Searching for Bernard Lonergan", America, Oct. 1, 2007, at 17; "Democracia y sociedad civil", no. 47, year XII, Humanitates,
Revista de Antropología y Cultura Cristiana 428 (2007); "John Paul II's Challenges to the Social Sciences", 10 Journal of Markets and Morality 263 (2007);
"Looking for 'Persons' in the Law", no. 168, First Things 19 (2006); "Principled Immigration", First Things, June-July 2006, at 23; "Family Law and Family
Policies in a Time of Turbulence", XXII/2 Anthropotes 297 (2006); "The Naked Public Square Now", no. 147, First Things 12 (2004); "Discovering Our Dependence",
no. 146, First Things 11 (2004); "Latinoamerica y los derechos humanos universales", 77 Criterio 239 (2004); "The Rule of Law in the Universal Declaration of
Human Rights", 2 Northwestern University Journal of International Human Rights 67 (2004); "The Right to Work", Work and Human Fulfillment, Sapientia Press,
2003, p. 145; "The Forgotten Crucible: The Latin American Influence on the Universal Human Rights Idea", 15 Harvard Human Rights Journal 27 (2003); "The Hour
of the Laity", First Things, November 2002; "Foundations of Human Rights: The Unfinished Business", 44 American Journal of Jurisprudence I (1999);
"Rousseau and the Revolt Against Reason", First Things, October 1999; "Knowing the Universal Declaration of Human Rights", 73 Notre Dame Law Review
1153 (1998); "Rights in Twentieth Century Constitutions", Univ. of Chicago Law Review 31, 1992, p. 1; "Structural Free Exercise", Michigan Law
Review 90, 1991, p. 477, (with Raul F. Yanes); "The Sources of Law in a Changing Legal Order", Creighton Law Review 17, 1984, p. 663 (The 1983 TePoel
Memorial Lecture); "Individualism and Communitarianism in Contemporary Legal Systems: Tensions and Accommodations", in Brigham Young Law Review 1993,
p. 385; "French Labor Law Reform 1982-83: The Struggle for Collective Bargaining", American Journal of Comparative Law 32, 1984, p. 449. |