On May 16, 1999 he was named the fifth director of the American Law Institute succeeding Geoffrey C. Hazard, Jr..
Geoffrey Chaucer | Geoffrey Rush | Oliver Hazard Perry | Geoffrey of Monmouth | Geoffrey Moull | Geoffrey Hill | Geoffrey Keezer | Geoffrey de Montbray | Geoffrey Wilkinson | Geoffrey Howe | Geoffrey Blainey | Geoffrey Robertson | Geoffrey Keating | The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon, Gent. | Geoffrey Palmer | Geoffrey Hartman | Geoffrey C. Hazard, Jr. | Geoffrey Robinson | Geoffrey Owens | Geoffrey Layton | Geoffrey Gurrumul Yunupingu | Geoffrey de Mandeville | Geoffrey de Luterel | Geoffrey Burbidge | Geoffrey | A Hazard of New Fortunes | Hazard (musician) | Hazard | Geoffrey Winthrop Young | Geoffrey Whitehead |
With Helen Nissenbaum, he founded the NSF funded Values in Design network to bring together scholars examining these issues across broader sites of study and across disciplines.
Geoffrey C. Fox (born 1944), professor of informatics and computing at Indiana University
Showman George "Roundhouse" Lehman had planned to construct a large theatre center on the land he purchased at this location, but he went broke and the property was sold to the City Attorney (and soon to be Mayor), Henry T. Hazard.
In the 1840s he collaborated with Rowland G. Hazard to secure the release of free African-Americans who were being illegally detained in Louisiana under the assumption they were escaped slaves.
He was associated with the Parker School of Foreign and Comparative Law at Columbia and helped shape its programs in Russian and East European law.
He worked with Jacob Barker, then a New Orleans lawyer, to obtain freedom for nearly 100 people being held as slaves.
Rowland G. Hazard (1801–1888), son of above, industrialist associated with textile mill complexes in Peace Dale and Carolina, Rhode Island