No. It's rather extraordinary that someone who was in academia for so long has never written anything but his own autobiographies.
The authorship of an unsigned 1990 article in the Review regarding the right of a fetus to sue his mother for unintentional prenatal injuries has been attributed to Barack Obama and was confirmed by his 2008 presidential campaign. That is believed to be his only article in the Review despite his having been President of the Review during the 1990-1991 academic year.
He was elected president of the Harvard Law Review (students "grade" or "write on" to the review, then the president is elected by their peers). He was the first black president of HLR. http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/thedailymirror/2008/09/barack-obama-ha.html
The Harvard Law Review is an academic journal published at the Law School. Barack Obama was the Review's first African-American editor. As the editor, his job duties varied, but they generally did not include writing letters-- it is usually readers who write to the publication, often commenting on an article. Sometimes, an editor will write an "editor's note" where a particular issue is explained or a reaction to a reader's comment is made. Editors also write or co-write articles for the journal, and they supervise the selection of articles that will be published in the journal.
Mr. President
Barack Obama was the Editor, and usually editors supervise the writing of others. We do know that he wrote several articles for the Review, including one about abortion and the law. We also know that he was a research assistant to a famous law professor named Lawrence Tribe and helped with several of Tribe's journal articles, as well as with a book Tribe was writing.
He would probably not have written a thesis for his undergraduate degree, and as for his Law Degree, if he had to write a dissertation, it would remain on file in the university archives or in the college's Law Library. Some universities make these papers public, while others do not without permission from the student. (It should be noted that when a school declines to make a student's papers public, that does not mean there is anything to hide. Where famous alumni are concerned, many schools prefer to make dissertations and theses available only to researchers, or to people who have a legitimate need to read them.)
As I write this answer, Barack Obama is the president. But on November 6th, 2012, there will be an election. We do not know who will win it, but after it is over, we will know if Mr. Obama is re-elected or if Mr. Romney is the new president.
It was in his 2nd year of being the president.
You can write to President Obama at the White House.
When President Obama was speaking, I felt like I was Anti what he was saying.
President Barack Obama is an incumbent becsuse he is currently in office
As I write this answer in November 2012, the president last year was Barack Obama. He has just won a second term as president, so he will be president next year too.
To become a member of the Harvard Law Review, students must typically go through a competitive selection process. This often involves participating in a writing competition where applicants write and submit a legal article. The selection committee then evaluates the submitted articles, along with academic performance and other criteria, to determine membership. Being selected for the Harvard Law Review is a prestigious accomplishment and varies from year to year based on the number of positions available.