Klemen Jaklic: Difference between revisions

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{{Infobox Professor
{{{Infobox person
| last_name    = Jaklic
|name          = Klemen Jaklic
| image       = [[Image:K_Jaklic_HLS.jpg]]
|image         =
| title        = Lecturer on Law
|image_size    =
| law_school  = Harvard Law School
|caption      =
| subjects    =  
|birth_name    =  
| status      =  
|birth_date    ={{birth date and age|1975|8|6}}
| taught_since =
|known_for     =
| alma_mater  =
|education    = Harvard Law School S.J.D. 2011, Oxford University D.Phil. 2007
| outlines     =  
|employer      = Harvard Law School
| website      = http://www.law.harvard.edu/faculty/directory/index.html?id=1007
|occupation    = Lecturer on Law
}}
}}
'''Klemen Jaklic''' is a law professor at [[Harvard Law School]]. Subjects taught by Klemen Jaklic include (please add subjects taught by this professor to this text and the infobox).


'''Klemen Jaklic''' (born August 6, 1975) is a legal academic, currently Lecturer on Law at [[Harvard Law School]]<ref name="HLS">http://www.law.harvard.edu/faculty/directory/index.html?id=1007</ref> and Teaching Fellow in Ethics at the [[John F. Kennedy School of Government]],<ref name="HKS">http://www.hks.harvard.edu/syllabus/DPI-201D.pdf</ref> [[Harvard University]]. He is among the world’s handful legal scholars who have concurrently completed both the Harvard and Oxford most advanced doctorate degrees in law:<ref>http://www.law.harvard.edu/academics/degrees/gradprogram/sjd/index.html</ref><ref>http://www.law.ox.ac.uk/postgraduate/dphil.php</ref> a D.Phil. from [[Oxford University]] and an S.J.D. from [[Harvard Law School]].<ref name="HLS" />


{{Professor stub}}
At Harvard he is teaching on European integration, moral reasoning: justice, human rights, constitutional law, ethics, and the future of democracy.<ref name="HLS" /><ref>http://www.law.harvard.edu/academics/courses/2011-12/?id=10159</ref><ref name="CES">http://www.ces.fas.harvard.edu/people/p341.html</ref> He is a recipient of repeated Harvard University teaching excellence awards<ref name="HLS" /> and a scholar on Europe whose recent work “Europe as a Route to Humanity’s Third Historic Stage of Democracy” won the Harvard 2011 Mancini Prize ("best work in the field of EU law and European thought").<ref name="HLS" /> Over the course of the last decade he worked primarily with [[Frank Michelman]] from Harvard and [[Paul Craig (law professor)|Paul Craig]] from Oxford,<ref name="SJD">http://www.law.harvard.edu/academics/degrees/gradprogram/sjd/sjd-current-students/klemen-jaklic.html</ref> who both have influenced this work in which Jaklic argues that the unique post-sovereign context of the new Europe has opened the possibility for humanity to initiate the “third historic leap” in our understanding and expansion of the concept of democracy.<ref name="Democracy">K Jaklic, "Democracy's Third Coming: Europe as a Route to Humanity's Third Historic Stage of Democracy", p 3, on file with the Lewis Law Library, Harvard Law School.</ref> It is described as the leap comparable in its significance and breadth only to the first initiation of the city-state democracy in ancient Athens (the first leap), and to the improved concept of the nation-state democracy that came as the aftermath of the 18th century democratic revolutions (the second, and current leap).<ref name="Democracy" /> In 2005 Klemen Jaklic published the first translation of the United States Constitution into Slovenian language.<ref>Jaklic Klemen and Jurij Toplak. Ustava ZDA s pojasnili (The U.S. Constitution With Commentary). Ljubljana: Nova obzorja, 2005.</ref> Jaklic is also current member of the European Commission for Democracy Through Law (the [[Venice Commission]]),<ref name="Venice">http://www.venice.coe.int/site/members/cv/cv_slo_jak_kle_e.asp</ref> and an Affiliate of the Harvard University Center for European Studies.<ref name="CES" /><ref>http://www.ces.fas.harvard.edu/</ref>
 
==External links==
*[http://www.law.harvard.edu/academics/handbook/handbookfaculty/
2011-12/2011-2012-faculty.html].
*[http://www.ces.fas.harvard.edu/people/p341.html] website at Harvard University Center for European Studies.
 
== Notes ==
{{Reflist}}
 
{{Persondata <!-- Metadata: see [[Wikipedia:Persondata]]. -->
| NAME              = Jaklic, Klemen
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES =
| SHORT DESCRIPTION = Law professor
| DATE OF BIRTH    = August 6, 1975
| PLACE OF BIRTH    =
| DATE OF DEATH    =
| PLACE OF DEATH    =
}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Jaklic, Klemen}}
[[Category:1975 births]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:Harvard Law School faculty]]
[[Category:Alumni of the University of Oxford]]

Revision as of 23:41, October 3, 2012

{Template:Infobox person

Klemen Jaklic (born August 6, 1975) is a legal academic, currently Lecturer on Law at Harvard Law School[1] and Teaching Fellow in Ethics at the John F. Kennedy School of Government,[2] Harvard University. He is among the world’s handful legal scholars who have concurrently completed both the Harvard and Oxford most advanced doctorate degrees in law:[3][4] a D.Phil. from Oxford University and an S.J.D. from Harvard Law School.[1]

At Harvard he is teaching on European integration, moral reasoning: justice, human rights, constitutional law, ethics, and the future of democracy.[1][5][6] He is a recipient of repeated Harvard University teaching excellence awards[1] and a scholar on Europe whose recent work “Europe as a Route to Humanity’s Third Historic Stage of Democracy” won the Harvard 2011 Mancini Prize ("best work in the field of EU law and European thought").[1] Over the course of the last decade he worked primarily with Frank Michelman from Harvard and Paul Craig from Oxford,[7] who both have influenced this work in which Jaklic argues that the unique post-sovereign context of the new Europe has opened the possibility for humanity to initiate the “third historic leap” in our understanding and expansion of the concept of democracy.[8] It is described as the leap comparable in its significance and breadth only to the first initiation of the city-state democracy in ancient Athens (the first leap), and to the improved concept of the nation-state democracy that came as the aftermath of the 18th century democratic revolutions (the second, and current leap).[8] In 2005 Klemen Jaklic published the first translation of the United States Constitution into Slovenian language.[9] Jaklic is also current member of the European Commission for Democracy Through Law (the Venice Commission),[10] and an Affiliate of the Harvard University Center for European Studies.[6][11]

External links

2011-12/2011-2012-faculty.html].

  • [1] website at Harvard University Center for European Studies.

Notes

Template:Persondata