UAlbany Awards Honorary Degree to Aharon Barak, President of Israeli
Supreme Court
Contact: Lisa James Goldsberry (518) 437-4989
The University at Albany will present an honorary Doctor of Laws degree
to Israeli jurist and scholar Aharon Barak, president of the Supreme
Court of Israel, on Tuesday, Oct. 3. The honorary degree convocation
will take place at 2:30 p.m. in the Campus Center Ballroom on UAlbany's
Uptown Campus.
A seminar will also be held from 4:30 to 5:30 p.m. in Lecture Center
Room 1, where Barak will address students and faculty of the Judaic
Studies program. Both events, part of the 30th anniversary celebration
of UAlbany's Department of Judaic Studies, are free and open to the
public.
Barak has achieved an international standing as one of the leading
jurists of our time. His influential legal publications have earned
him respect and admiration from legal scholars everywhere. His book,
Judicial Discretion (Yale University Press, 1989) has been translated
into several languages. He is seen as the driving force behind the independence
of the Israeli Supreme Court and the establishment of American style
judicial review into Israeli common law.
Since his appointment as a Supreme Court justice in 1978, Barak helped
shape Israel's constitutional and commercial laws. In 1983, he was appointed
the court's Deputy President and two years later its President.
Prior to his appointment to the Supreme Court, he served as Israel's
Attorney General and as a key foreign affairs advisor to Prime Minister
Menachem Begin. He played a major role as the Israeli legal advisor
during the final discussions at Camp David, which led to the 1979 signing
of the Egytpian-Israeli peace agreement. In addition to his public service
duties, Barak teaches seminars on constitutional law at the law schools
of both Yale and Harvard Universities.
"The University at Albany is delighted and honored to recognize President
Aharon Barak for his extraordinary achievements in, and contributions
to, the areas of jurisprudence, international affairs, government, and
teaching and scholarship," said University President Karen R. Hitchcock.
"As president, he has not only strengthened the authority and prestige
of the Supreme Court, but he has exercised uncommon leadership and breadth
of vision at the forefront of the broad social movement to create a
more open Jewish society and a more modern political Israeli state."
Born in Lithuania in 1936, Barak and his parents moved to Israel in
1947. He studied at Hebrew University in Jerusalem, where he earned
an undergraduate degree in law, economics and international relations
as well as a Masters of Arts in law in 1958 and a doctorate in 1963.
He became a full professor of Law at Hebrew University in 1972 and two
years later was appointed Dean of the Law Faculty. In addition to winning
the Kaplan prize for excellence in science and research, as well as
the Israeli Prize in legal sciences, he is a member of the Israeli Academy
of Sciences.
"Chief Justice Barak has led the Supreme Court to take a more active
role in protecting human rights, even when that portends a change in
the place that the Jewish religion plays in Israeli society," said Martin
Edelman, a professor of political science at UAlbany.
Other plans to celebrate the anniversary include an open invitation
to community members to audit the fall courses of the Judaic Studies
Department, and a monthly Judaic Studies Lunch-and-Learn Series.
For more University at Albany information, visit our World Wide Web
site at https://www.albany.edu.
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September 21, 2000
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