|
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – Lori Damrosch of Columbia Law School will
present the Daniel J. Meador Lecture on Thursday, Feb. 19, at The
University of Alabama School of
Law.
The lecture, “Enforcing International Law in the United States’
Courts,” will start at 1 p.m. in the Moot Courtroom of the
Law Center and is open to the public.
Damrosch, who is Henry L. Moses Professor of Law and International
Organization, has served on the Columbia faculty since 1984. She
earned her B.A. (1973) and J.D. from Yale University (1976). Following
graduation, Damrosch clerked for Judge Jon O. Newman and then served
in the Office of the Legal Adviser with the United States Department
of State. She served as vice president of the American Society of
International Law (ASIL) from 1996-98 and has been a counselor of
ASIL since 2001.
Damrosch has been a member of the board of editors of the American
Journal of International Law since 1990 and currently serves as
co-editor-in-chief. She has written numerous articles and book chapters
and has edited works including “Beyond Confrontation: International
Law for the Post-Cold Era” (Westview Press, 1995) and “Enforcing
Restraint: Collective Intervention in Internal Conflicts”
(Council on Foreign Relations Press, 1993).
The Daniel J. Meador Lecture was established in 1994 to honor the
University’s former professor and Law Dean Daniel J. Meador.
A member of the Alabama law class of 1951 and professor emeritus
at the University of Virginia School of Law, Professor Meador delivered
the inaugural lecture in the series.
For more information, contact Jennifer McCracken at 205/348-5195,
jmccrack@law.ua.edu.
|