... Following law school, Obama became an associate at the Chicago office of the law firm Sidley & Austin, where she met her future husband Barack. At the firm, she worked on marketing and intellectual property law.[3] She continues to hold her law license, but as she no longer needs it for her work, she has kept it on a voluntary inactive status since 1993.[76][77]
Barrack: Despite being offered a full scholarship to Northwestern University School of Law, Obama enrolled at Harvard Law School in the fall of 1988, living in nearby Somerville, Massachusetts.[61] He was selected as an editor of the Harvard Law Review at the end of his first year,[62] president of the journal in his second year,[56][63] and research assistant to the constitutional scholar Laurence Tribe while at Harvard.[64] During his summers, he returned to Chicago, where he worked as a summer associate at the law firms of Sidley Austin in 1989 and Hopkins & Sutter in 1990.[65] Obama's election as the first black president of the Harvard Law Review gained national media attention[56][63] and led to a publishing contract and advance for a book about race relations,[66] which evolved into a personal memoir. The manuscript was published in mid-1995 as Dreams from My Father.[66] Obama graduated from Harvard Law in 1991 with a Juris Doctor magna cum laude.[67][62]
University of Chicago Law School
In 1991, Obama accepted a two-year position as Visiting Law and Government Fellow at the University of Chicago Law School to work on his first book.[66][68] He then taught constitutional law at the University of Chicago Law School for twelve years, first as a lecturer from 1992 to 1996, and then as a senior lecturer from 1996 to 2004.[69]
From April to October 1992, Obama directed Illinois's Project Vote, a voter registration campaign with ten staffers and seven hundred volunteer registrars; it achieved its goal of registering 150,000 of 400,000 unregistered African Americans in the state, leading Crain's Chicago Business to name Obama to its 1993 list of "40 under Forty" powers to be.[70]