Bruce H. Mann


Bruce Hartling Mann is an American legal scholar who is the Carl F. Schipper, Jr. Professor of Law at Harvard Law School, and husband of U.S. Senator Elizabeth Warren. A legal historian, his research focuses on the relationship among legal, social, and economic change in early United States. He began teaching at Harvard Law School in 2006, after being the Leon Meltzer Professor of Law and Professor of History at the University of Pennsylvania Law School.

Education

Mann graduated in 1968 from Hingham High School in Hingham, Massachusetts. He received A.B. and A.M. degrees from Brown University and M.Phil., J.D., and Ph.D. degrees from Yale University. His dissertation is titled "Rationality, Legal Change, and Community in Connecticut, 1690–1760." Mann has been licensed to practice law in Connecticut since 1975.

Career

After graduation, Mann taught at the University of Connecticut School of Law, Washington University School of Law, University of Houston Law Center, University of Texas School of Law, University of Michigan Law School, and the history department at Princeton University. In 1987, Mann started to teach at the University of Pennsylvania Law School.
He is the author of Neighbors and Strangers: Law and Community in Early Connecticut and Republic of Debtors: Bankruptcy in the Age of American Independence. From 2011-2013, Mann served as President of the American Society for Legal History.

Personal life

Mann is married to Elizabeth Warren, the senior United States Senator from Massachusetts and a former law professor. Warren proposed to Mann after he had finished teaching a property class that she had sat in on.
Warren officially announced her candidacy for president of the United States on February 8, 2019.
Mann was involved in the Elizabeth Warren Native American ancestry scandal in that he also erroneously claimed Cherokee ancestry in the same 1984 cookbook that Warren did.

Awards