He received a J.D. (Juris Doctor), with academic honors, from Harvard Law School.
Yes, he earned the JD (Doctor of Laws) in 1991, with academic honors.
Barack Obama received a degree from Harvard Law School. Mitt Romney received a degree from Harvard Business School.
Barack Obama graduated from Columbia University in 1983 with a BA in Political Studies (International Relations). At Harvard Law School he was editor of the Law Review and graduated with a JD, magna cum laude, in 1991.
He received his law degree (JD) in 1991 from Harvard Law School.
He graduated from Harvard Law School with academic honors in 1991.
No. Barack Obama was the 25th lawyer to earn presidency.
Since 2001, U.S. presidents earn $400,000 a year. They also receive an allowance for travel and for entertainment.
It was a very close election right up until the end, but on November 6th, 2012, Barack Obama was in fact re-elected. He won both the popular vote and the electoral vote, to earn a second term as president. He is constitutionally forbidden from running for a third term.
Obama believes environmental issues are good excuses for massive, crippling taxes & for taking money from people who work hard to earn it, & give it to people who give HIM money or power by voting for him.
He has a Juris Doctor (J.D.) degree in law.
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.)
There is a lot of proof. He has JD degree (Doctor of Laws) from Harvard, and received academic honors. He was editor of the Law Review, there are articles he wrote or contributed to, and professors who knew him have spoken publicly about his work.