Sally Falk Moore Explained

Sally Falk Moore (January 18, 1924 – May 2, 2021) was a legal anthropologist and professor emerita at Harvard University. She did her major fieldwork in Tanzania and published extensively on cross-cultural, comparative legal theory.[1]

Moore was trained as a lawyer at Columbia Law school and, after working on Wall Street, became a staff attorney at the International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg during the investigation of Nazi war criminals.[2] She then returned to the US and received her PhD in anthropology from Columbia University in 1957. She was chair of the anthropology section of the joint department of sociology and anthropology at the University of Southern California (1963–1977, 1969–1972) and a professor at University of California at Los Angeles (1977–1981) and Yale University (1975–1976) before she joined the Harvard University faculty in 1981. She was dean of the Graduate School at Harvard from 1985 to 1989. In 2010 she was appointed affiliated professor of international legal studies at Harvard Law School.

Major publications

Some awards

Notable students

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Who's Who of American Women, 1997-1998 . 1996 . Marquis Who's Who . 759 . 9780837904221 . 9 March 2021.
  2. Web site: Archived copy . www.law.harvard.edu . 12 January 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20060910030642/http://www.law.harvard.edu/conferences/nuremberg_legacies/falkmoorebio.php . 10 September 2006 . dead.
  3. Web site: APS Member History. 2021-06-08. search.amphilsoc.org.