A memorial service for Dean's Distinguished Research Scholar and Professor of Law Donna
E. Arzt is planned for Friday, March 27, at 1 p.m. in Hendricks Chapel. The services will be
followed by a 2 p.m. ceremonial event at the H. Douglas Barclay Law Library with a
collection from Arzt's personal library. A reception will follow in the Heritage Alumni
Lounge.
Arzt died on Nov. 15, 2008, after a long illness. She had been a professor in the Syracuse
University College of Law since September 1988.
At the College of Law, she served as director of the Center for Global Law and Practice and
founded and directed the Lockerbie Trial ~ Families Project, which informed the families of
the 270 victims of the Pan Am Flight 103 bombing about developments in the Lockerbie
criminal trial as the trial took place in a Scottish courtroom in the Netherlands. She also
founded and directed the Sierra Leone Project, in which faculty and students assisted the
Office of the Prosecutor of the Special Court for Sierra Leone, which was established by the
United Nations and the country's government at the end of the decade-long Sierra Leone
civil war. She was named to the inaugural Bond, Schoeneck & King Distinguished
Professorship at the College of Law in 2002.
Before coming to Syracuse, Arzt practiced public interest law in Boston and was an assistant
attorney general for the state of Massachusetts in civil rights and regulation of charitable
solicitation. She published numerous articles on human rights in the Soviet Union and the
Middle East and served as a consultant to the Association for Civil Rights in Israel, Human
Rights Watch, and the U.N. Special Rapporteur on population transfer.
She received the Michael J. Tryson Memorial Award for Excellence and Leadership in the
field of human rights law. Her book "Refugees into Citizens: Palestinians and the End of the
Arab-Israeli Conflict" was published by the Council on Foreign Relations in 1997.
Arzt earned a B.A. degree at Brandeis University, a J.D. degree at Harvard University and
an LL.M. degree at Columbia University.
Contributions in her memory may be made to New Israel Fund, 1101 14th St. NW, Sixth
Floor, Washington, D.C. 20005, or to a charity or reputable human rights organizations of
the donor's choice.