After 130 Years, Harvard Law Review Elects a Black Woman President
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. It has been 27 years since the first black man, an older student by the name of Barack Obama, was elected president of the prestigious Harvard Law Review. It has been even longer 41 years since the first woman, Susan Estrich, was elected to the position. Since then, subsequent presidents have been female, Hispanic, Asian-American, openly gay and black.
Only now, for the first time in the history of the venerable 130-year-old journal, is the president a black woman.
ImeIme (pronounced Ah-MAY-may) Umana, 24, the third-oldest of four daughters of Nigerian immigrants, was elected on Jan. 29 by the reviews 92 student editors as the president of its 131st volume.
The Harvard Law Review which, like other law reviews, allows students to hone their legal writing skills and gives scholars a forum in which to thrash out legal arguments is often the most-cited journal of its kind and has the largest circulation of any such publication in the world.
Its presidency is considered the highest-ranking student position at the ferociously competitive law school and a ticket to virtually anywhere in the legal realm. Half of the current Supreme Court justices served on the Harvard Law Review, though none as its president.
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