Harry Kalven
Harry Kalven Jr. (September 11, 1914 – October 29, 1974) was an American legal scholar known for his scholarship on
tort law and
United States constitutional law. He was the Harry A. Bigelow Professor of Law at the
University of Chicago Law School, having graduated from the
College and the Law School. Kalven coauthored, with Charles O. Gregory (and later
Richard Epstein), a widely used textbook in the field of
torts, ''Cases and Materials on Torts.'' Kalven was also a scholar in the field of
constitutional law, particularly in the area of the
First Amendment. Kalven is the coauthor of "The Contemporary Function of the Class Suit," one of the most heavily cited articles in the history of
American law, and widely considered to be the foundation of the modern
class action lawsuit. He also co-authored a pioneering empirical study of ''The American Jury'' with his Chicago colleague
Hans Zeisel.
He coined the term
Heckler's veto.
He was chair of the committee that produced what became known as the "
Kalven Report", a document outlining the
University of Chicago's role "in political and social action."
After his death, his son
Jamie Kalven, a journalist and human rights activist, completed Kalven's unfinished manuscript which was published by Harper & Row in 1988 as ''A Worthy Tradition: Freedom of Speech in America''. In recognition of his impact on interdisciplinary legal research, the Law and Society Association awards the Harry J. Kalven, Jr. Prize each year to a scholar selected for “empirical scholarship that has contributed most effectively to the advancement of research in law and society.”
Provided by Wikipedia