“The extraordinary power of the HLSA is people,” says Salvo Arena. “Alumni can help each other in very powerful ways.”
Halfway into his term as president of the Harvard Law School Association, Salvo Arena LL.M. ’00 says one of the questions he hears most often when he meets with other alumni is, What exactly is the HLSA and what does it do?
He is proud of the fact that during his tenure the HLSA has recognized two outstanding HLS professors, William Alford ’77 and Charles Ogletree ’78, with the association’s highest honor.
He is also proud that the HLSA has enlarged its executive committee. “We have lawyers and judges, as in the past, but we now also have members engaged in the private equity sector, investment bankers, lawyers from the Americas, but also from Europe and Asia.”
One of Arena’s goals is to have the HLSA be more connected to the alumni associations of other Harvard schools. He imagines a collaboration with the Harvard Business School Alumni Association, for example, which would lead to a joint leadership forum. “I believe that is the direction we need to go.”
He also wants to focus on improving mentoring activities both on a local basis and on a national basis.
Later this fall, the HLSA will officially launch its new website, which will make it much easier to find events all over the world and “to facilitate the connection of alumni.”
The association has added more content on LinkedIn, started an Instagram account and improved content on existing social media channels.
“These are all tools,” says Arena, “keys to open the door. But once you open the door, the extraordinary power of the HLSA is people—it’s the alumni, which is something astonishing. What we are trying to do is make the alumni more and more aware of the phenomenal and beneficial resources that we can have being part of this community.”
Beyond the details of what has been accomplished, when people ask Arena about what the HLSA does, his answers come down to its potential to connect.
“I do believe that alumni can really help each other in very powerful ways,” he says. “And again, it’s all about the network. We are talking about a potential network of 38,000 people. The network is not just your class,” says Arena, who is the managing partner of the New York City office of the Italian law firm Chiomenti Studio Legale, “but a global network of all Harvard Law School alumni.”
© 2016 the President and Fellows of Harvard College. Courtesy of Chiomenti Studio Legale – a member of the EACCNY