Please Note:
This profile was automatically generated using 3 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
This profile was automatically generated using 3 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
Web References
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1. Goodwin Procter LLP:
www.goodwinprocter.com/PeopleD - [Cached]Published on: 6/19/2006 Last Visited: 6/19/2006
Randall B. Clark » Goodwin Procter LLP:
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Randall B. Clark
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Randall Clark Associate
53 State Street Exchange Place
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Randall Clark is a member of Goodwin Procter's Litigation Department. He joined the firm in 2003.
Publications/Presentations
Mr. Clark is the author of The Law Most Beautiful and Best: Magical Rhetoric and Medical Argument in Plato's Laws, Rowman & Littlefieldâ€"Lexington Books (2003); "Speed, Safety, and Dignity: Pediatric Pharmaceutical Development in an Age of Optimism," 9 University of Chicago Law School Roundtable 1 (2003); and "Platonic Love in a Colorado Courtroom: Martha Nussbaum, John Finnis, and Plato's Laws in Evans v. Romer," 12 Yale Journal of Law & the Humanities 1 (2000). His essay on pediatric research was the winner of the Judge John R. Brown Award for Excellence in Legal Writing and runner-up in the FoxKiser Annual Writing Competition in Law, Science & Medicine.
Professional Experience
Prior to joining Goodwin Procter, Mr. Clark served for a year in the chambers of the Hon. Edith H. Jones (2002-03) in the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit. Before turning to the study of the law, he was Research Associate in the Department of Government at Dartmouth College (1997-99).
Bar and Court Admissions
Mr. Clark is a member of the Massachusetts bar and admitted to practice before the Federal District Court for the District of Massachusetts and the First Circuit Court of Appeals. -
2. Is Sodomy Unnatural? (And What's Wrong With That?)
www.anotherscene.com/phaedrus/ - [Cached]Published on: 11/6/2000 Last Visited: 11/30/2001
Randall B. Clark, Dartmouth College
To the ridicule of the highbrow popular press[1] and the surprise of classical scholars,[2] Platoís Laws, a work which was mocked, even in antiquity, for its aesthetic frigidity,[3] has enjoyed of late a remarkable fifteen minutes under the sun. -
3. The Claremont Institute's APSA Annual Meeting Program 1999
www.claremont.org/apsa/Apsa98. - [Cached]Published on: 9/2/1998 Last Visited: 4/19/2002
Randall B. Clark, Dartmouth College

