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The '''Harlan Institute''' is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization whose mission is "tto bring a stylized law school experience into the high school classroom to ensure that our next generation of leaders has a proper understanding of our most fundamental laws."<ref>http://harlaninstitute.org/?page_id=9/</ref>
The '''Harlan Institute''' is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization whose mission is "tto bring a stylized law school experience into the high school classroom to ensure that our next generation of leaders has a proper understanding of our most fundamental laws."<ref>http://harlaninstitute.org/?page_id=9/</ref> The primary focus of the Harlan Institute is on the study of the [[Supreme Court of the United States]] and on [[United States Constitution|constitutional law]. The Institute's primary means of supplying legal education to a high school audience is through [[FantasySCOTUS]], a program devoted to giving high schoolers a free way to predict "real cases that the students will read in the news."<ref>http://harlaninstitute.org/?page_id=98/</ref>

The Harlan Institute is a partner of Justice Sandra Day O'Connor's [[Sandra Day O'Connor|iCivics]]. <ref>http://www.icivics.org/news/justice-o’connor’s-icivics-and-harlan-institute-announce-new-partnership</ref>


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 19:28, 25 December 2010

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Harlan Institute
Founded2009
FounderJosh Blackman, Yaakov Roth
FocusCivic-Education
Location
Area served
Worldwide, with focus on the United States
Websiteharlaninstitute.org

The Harlan Institute is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization whose mission is "tto bring a stylized law school experience into the high school classroom to ensure that our next generation of leaders has a proper understanding of our most fundamental laws."[1] The primary focus of the Harlan Institute is on the study of the Supreme Court of the United States and on [[United States Constitution|constitutional law]. The Institute's primary means of supplying legal education to a high school audience is through FantasySCOTUS, a program devoted to giving high schoolers a free way to predict "real cases that the students will read in the news."[2]

The Harlan Institute is a partner of Justice Sandra Day O'Connor's iCivics. [3]

References