Berkeley Law staff member Natalie Golden shines as a world amateur champion salsa dancer, competing victoriously for elite Oakland dance company Salsamania.
Kevin Walker ’17 calls his work as a reserve police officer “community service on steroids” and “a meaningful way to give back.” His duties—and risks—mirror those of a full-time cop.
In Nevada, legislators were famously less regulatory-minded than their California counterparts. Self-driving cars found their first, and likely most propitious, proving ground there.
Sojourner Kincaid Rolle ’81 has been Santa Barbara’s poet laureate for the past two years and has enjoyed a prolific career in writing, teaching, and activism.
Edward Tom has made the phone call thousands of times. But the reactions are wonderfully unique from those who get the good news: “You’ve been admitted to Berkeley Law.”
Jasleen Singh ’17 explores identity, judgment, discrimination, immigration, and domestic violence in the “Sikh Monologues,” spun from interviews with more than 150 Sikh people across the U.S.
When he’s not representing celebrities, Miles Cooley ’99 helps nonprofits that advocate for foster children. “I want to make sure other kids don’t have it like I did.”
Louise Ing ’78 and Colbert Matsumoto ’78 support the Judge Martin Pence ’31 Fellowship Fund, which helps talented Berkeley Law students who are from Hawaii or interested in practicing there.
With graduates living and working in 103 countries, and faculty and students contributing to international scholarship and service, Berkeley Law is making a big imprint on the global legal profession.
New members of the Boalt Hall Alumni Association board of directors Karen Boyd ’96 and Paul Clark ’80 are eager to help the law school navigate the terrain ahead.
California Senator Henry Stern ’09 questions whether the federal government will attempt to preempt states’ rights, as California moves a progressive agenda forward.
Small actions that support Berkeley Law make a big impact on the school and the world around us. This concept stood at the heart of “The Berkeley Effect,” the theme of UC Berkeley’s annual Big Give.
While studying for his LL.M. degree, Todung Mulya Lubis ’78 took an International Human Rights Law class with Professor Frank Newman. The course changed the direction of his career—and his country.