Harvard
Law School and
the Berkman
Center for
Internet &
Society at
Harvard
University are
pleased to
announce that
Michael R.
Klein LL.M.
’67 has made a
generous gift
of $15 million
to the Berkman
Center. In
recognition,
the Center
will now be
known as the Berkman Klein Center for Internet
& Society.
“This
gift helps
ensure that
Harvard Law
School will
remain at the
forefront of
problem
solving as we
confront and
take advantage
of the global
and digital
future,” said
Martha Minow,
Morgan and
Helen Chu Dean
of the Law
School. “In
1997, a
remarkably
farsighted
gift from the
late Jack N.
Berkman ’29
and Lillian R.
Berkman
created the
Berkman Center
for Internet
& Society.
The scope of
the Center’s
work and the
global reach
of the
Internet have
grown
dramatically
over the last
two decades.
Now, as the
Center
approaches a
third decade
of innovation,
we are deeply
grateful for
Mike Klein’s
gift, which
will build on
the Berkman
family’s
generosity to
sustain the
Center’s
leadership
position and
allow for
continued
exploration in
the years to
come.”
Klein’s
gift is the
largest
individual
gift to the
Law
School’s Campaign
for the Third
Century to
date. The
Campaign is
part of the
University-wide,
$6.5 billion
Harvard
Campaign that
runs until
2018.
“A
generous
Brandeis
Fellowship
enabled me to
attend
Harvard, and
that education
opened
extraordinary
opportunities
for me,” Klein
said. “Now,
the ability to
give back to
Harvard Law
School is a
privilege that
I am deeply
grateful for,
particularly
because my
contribution
can be
directed to an
exciting,
entrepreneurial
Center that is
in the
vanguard of
cyberspace
research.”
A
Center—and a
gift—for the
future
The Berkman
Klein Center
for Internet
&
Society is
dedicated to
exploring,
understanding,
and shaping
the
development of
the digitally
networked
environment. A
diverse,
interdisciplinary
community of
scholars,
practitioners,
technologists,
policy
experts, and
advocates, the
Center has
tackled the
most important
challenges of
the digital
age while
keeping a
focus on
tangible
real-world
impact in the
public
interest. Its
faculty,
fellows,
staff, and
affiliates
conduct
research,
build tools
and platforms,
educate
others, and
form bridges
and facilitate
dialogue
across and
among diverse
communities.
At
a time when
the
opportunities
and challenges
of an
increasingly
networked
world abound
and digital
transformations
are profoundly
shaping the
future of
society, this
gift will not
only provide
vital core
support, but
will also
allow the
Center to
start new
explorations,
launch
innovative
programs, and
incubate novel
collaborations
both
nationally and
internationally.
“Mike
Klein’s
extraordinary
commitment
joins the
Berkman
family’s in
allowing us
the rare and
precious
liberty to
plan and build
according to
imagination
and
conscience,”
said Jonathan
Zittrain ’95,
the Center’s
co-founder and
current
faculty
director. “The
Center was
premised on
the idea that
the Internet’s
design invites
contribution,
and that
difficult
problems can
be understood
and solved
through
thoughtful and
sensitive
combinations
of technical
and
institutional
innovations,
both public
and private.”
“In
particular,
this gift will
help us to
build new and
enhanced
interfaces
between the
worlds of
computer
science,
engineering,
law,
governance,
and policy
through
powerful
research
initiatives,
educational
programs, and
outreach
efforts,
bringing
together the
best know-how
from both
academia and
practice, and
engaging the
next
generation of
technology and
policy leaders
and makers,”
said Urs
Gasser LL.M.
’03, professor
of practice at
HLS and
executive
director of
the Berkman
Klein Center.
The
Center has
catalyzed
dozens of
initiatives
concerning the
Internet,
particularly
in the areas
of law and
policy,
education and
public
discourse, and
access to
information.
These
endeavors
include
rigorous
academic
research with
the aim of
achieving
tangible,
real-world
impact, such
as the recent
high-profile “Don’t Panic: Making Progress on the
‘Going Dark’
Debate”
report
released by
the Center’s
Berklett
Cybersecurity
project, which
garnered
widespread
attention from
policymakers
and the media.
Other key
initiatives
include
building tools
that preserve
and monitor
access to
information,
such as Amber, an open source tool that
preserves
content and
prevents
broken links;
the Lumen database, which serves as
the definitive
source for
worldwide
requests to
remove content
from the
Internet; and Internet Monitor, a project
that aims to
evaluate,
describe, and
summarize the
means,
mechanisms,
and extent of
Internet
content
controls and
other activity
around the
world.
The
Center is also
committed to
building
bridges and
fostering
connections
among diverse
communities
and
perspectives,
such as by
incubating the Global Network of
Internet and
Society
Research
Centers (NoC),
a
collaborative
initiative
among academic
institutions
with a focus
on
interdisciplinary
research on
the
development,
social impact,
policy
implications,
and legal
issues
concerning the
Internet.
The Cyberlaw Clinic, in which HLS
students
provide pro
bono legal
services and
earn course
credit, is
also part of
the Center.
The clinic was
the first of
its kind, and
it continues
its tradition
of innovation
in its areas
of practice.
Students are
supervised by
experienced
and licensed
attorneys as
they provide
service to
clients on
issues
relating to
the Internet,
new
technology,
and
intellectual
property.
Students also
work with
clients to
shape the
law's
development
through policy
and advocacy
efforts.
In
2008, the
Center was
elevated from
a research
center at the
Law School to
a
University-wide
interfaculty
Initiative.
Since then the
Center has
expanded to
include more
than 500
community
members from
40 countries.
This growth
stems from
both an
expansion of
the Center’s
human network
and its
entrepreneurial
spirit and
willingness to
take risks in
pioneering new
areas of
study. With
support from
Mike Klein, as
well as that
of other
generous
donors and
foundations,
the Berkman
Klein Center
aims to
continue to
grow in areas
where it can
have the
biggest
impact.
Philanthropy
with purpose
Klein
received his
undergraduate
and law
degrees from
the University
of Miami
before earning
an LL.M. at
Harvard Law
School in
1967. From
1974 through
2005, he was a
partner at
Wilmer Cutler
Pickering Hale
and Dorr LLP
(now
WilmerHale).
In 2004, he
made a gift to
endow the
Michael R.
Klein
Professorship
of Law, a
chair held by
Professor
Randall L.
Kennedy. Klein
has also
generously
supported the
Law School’s
Annual Fund
and the
Charles
Hamilton
Houston
Institute for
Race and
Justice, and
he serves on
the HLS Dean’s
Advisory
Board.
Today,
Klein is
focused on
business and
non-profit
ventures. He
is chairman of
the Sunlight
Foundation, a
non-partisan,
non-profit
group that he
co-founded in
2005 to bring
greater
transparency
to the
workings of
Congress. The
Sunlight
Foundation has
participated
in several
Berkman Center
events. Klein
is also the
chairman of
CoStar Group
Inc., a
publicly
traded
provider of
commercial
real estate
information
that he
co-founded in
1987. In 2013,
he established
Gun Violence
Archive, Inc.,
a
not-for-profit
corporation
that provides
free online
public access
to information
about
gun-related
violence in
the United
States.
Additionally,
he is vice
chairman of
the board and
lead outside
director for
the
Tutor-Perini
Corporation, a
major general
contractor.
Klein’s
non-profit
commitments
include
service as
chair of the
board of
trustees for
the
Shakespeare
Theatre
Company, a
member of the
boards of
directors for
both the
American
Himalayan
Foundation and
the NAACP
Legal Defense
&
Education
Fund, and a
trustee of The
Aspen
Institute and
the Aspen
Music Festival
and School.