Alan Dershowitz

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Alan Morton Dershowitz (born 1 September 1938) is an Jewish-American lawyer and political commentator. He is the Felix Frankfurter Professor of Law at Harvard Law School[1] He is an outspoken advocate of Israel and has been involved in a number of high profile disputes with critics of Israeli policy. Dershowitz has been criticized for shoddy scholarship and plagiarism by people both on the left and the right.[2]

Education and Career

Dershowitz studied a law degree at Yale University and graduated in 1962. He was an assistant professor at Harvard Law School from 1964 to 1967. He was awared an MA in 1967 and has been a professor at Harvard Law School since. [3]


The Case for Israel

In 2003, after the publication of the book The Case for Israel, Norman Finkelstein accused Dershowitz, of "fraud, falsification, plagiarism and nonsense."[4] Finkelstein noted that in twenty instances that all occur within about as many pages, Dershowitz's book excerpts the same words from the same sources that Joan Peters used in her book From Time Immemorial, a book about the history of Israel that was recognized as a hoax by serious scholars in the US, and the UK as well as Israel.[5] Several paragraph-long quotes that the two books share have ellipses in the same position, Finkelstein pointed out; and in one instance Dershowitz referenced the same page number as Peters, although he was citing a different edition of the source, in which the words appear on a different page.[6]

In another instance, Finkelstein points out:

On a note both humorous and pathetic, Peters, in From Time Immemorial, claiming to be inspired by George Orwell, coins the term "turnspeak" to signal the inversion of reality (pp. 173, 402). Dershowitz, apparently confounded by his massive borrowings from Peters, credits the term "turnspeak" to Orwell, accusing critics of Israel of "deliberately using George Orwell's 'turnspeak'" (p. 57) and "Orwellian turnspeak" (p. 153). Is this scandalous scholarship, or is it plagiarism, or is it both?[7]

Publications

  • 2005: The Case for Peace : How the Arab-Israeli Conflict Can be Resolved
  • 2004: Rights From Wrongs: A Secular Theory of the Origins of Rights
  • 2004: America on Trial: Inside the Legal Battles That Transformed Our Nation--From the Salem Witches to the Guantanamo Detainees
  • 2003: America Declares Independence
  • 2003: The Case for Israel
  • 2002: Shouting Fire: Civil Liberties in a Turbulent Age
  • 2002: Why Terrorism Works: Understanding the threat, responding to the challenge
  • 2001: Supreme Injustice: How the High Court Hijacked Election 2000
  • 2001: Letters to a Young Lawyer
  • 2000: The Genesis of Justice: ten stories of biblical injustice that led to the Ten Commandments and modern law
  • 1999: Just Revenge (fiction)
  • 1998: Sexual McCarthyism: Clinton, Starr, and the emerging constitutional crisis
  • 1997: The Vanishing American Jew: in search of Jewish identity for the next century
  • 1996: Reasonable Doubts: The Criminal Justice System and the O.J. Simpson Case
  • 1994: The Abuse Excuse: and other cop-outs, sob stories, and evasions of responsibility
  • 1994: The Advocate's Devil (fiction)
  • 1992: Contrary to Popular Opinion
  • 1991: Chutzpah
  • 1988: Taking Liberties: a decade of hard cases, bad laws, and bum raps
  • 1985: Reversal of Fortune: Inside the von Balow Case
  • 1982: The Best Defense
  • 1973: In Defense of Shahak, Boston Globe

Related Links

Notes

  1. [1]
  2. [2][3]
  3. 'Alan Morton Dershowitz', The Complete Marquis Who's Who (R) Biographies, 10 February 2009, accessed via Lexis Nexis on 29 May 2009