Skip to main content

NYU LAW - Hauser Global Law School Program

Image result for nyu law
Image result for Hauser Global Law School Program


NYU’s unique Hauser Global Law School Program, established in 1995 with a generous gift from Rita and Gustave Hauser, comprises four distinct and important groups: the Hauser Global Scholars, Global Fellows, Global Faculty, and Distinguished Global Fellows. 

Hauser Global Scholars are graduate law students selected from around the world as future leaders across the fields of legal practice, public interest, government, and industry. Approximately 10 outstanding graduate law students receive full scholarships each year from the Hauser Global Law School Program.   
Hauser Global Fellows are academics, lawyers, government officers, and postdoctoral scholars from around the world who spend up to one year in residence at NYU Law working on personal research projects. The primary goal of this program is to facilitate the production of scholarship and the advancement of research on significant global issues.  
Hauser Global Faculty are renowned international academics and practitioners who specialize in a wide range of legal subjects and are invited to teach specially designed courses, conduct research, and interact with each other and with faculty, students, and alumni.
Hauser Distinguished Global Fellows are notable intellectual figures who visit the Law School for two or three weeks, and share their expertise with the community by giving lectures and contributing to other educational and scholarly events.
In addition, each year the Law School also welcomes a select group of Visiting Doctoral Researchers, who are candidates enrolled in a doctoral degree program at another institution abroad who wish to benefit from spending one year of their research at NYU. The Visiting Doctoral Researchers Program is administered by the JSD Program.
Over the years, many distinguished legal figures have participated in the Hauser Global Law School Program. Previous Global Faculty members include Georges Abi-Saab, former chairman of the Appellate Body of the World Trade Organization and professor at the Institute des Hautes Etudes Internationales, Geneva; Giuliano Amato, former prime minister of Italy and professor at the European University Institute in Florence; Jürgen Habermas, professor of philosophy and sociology at Frankfurt University; Catherine O'Regan, former justice of the Constitutional Court of South Africa; Dieter Grimm, former judge of the German Constitutional Court and professor at Humboldt University; and Dorit Beinisch, former president of the Supreme Court of Israel. Previous Distinguished Global Fellows have included Justice Richard Goldstone of the South African Constitutional Court and Judge Bruno Simma of the International Court of Justice.

In 2005, NYU Law celebrated the 10th anniversary of the Hauser Global Law School Program at a reunion event attended by prominent world leaders and legal experts including former Secretary General of the United Nations Kofi Annan, former President of France Valery Giscard d’Estaing, and former President of the Dominican Republic Dr. Leonel Fernández. This event provided for the exchange of ideas between Hauser alumni and included a series of panels on international adjudication, the teaching of law, corporate professional responsibility, and international terrorism.

NYU Law proudly celebrated the 20th anniversary of the Hauser Global Law School Program and its myriad achievements in October 2014. The anniversary event brought together current and former faculty, scholars, fellows, and alumni to examine the salient theme of Global Transitions in a series of panels over a two-day period. The event featured keynote speeches by Koen Lenaerts, vice-president of the Court of Justice of the European Union, and Mohamed ElBaradei LLM ’71, JSD ’74, LLD ’04, Nobel Peace Prize winner, former director general of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), and the last vice president of Egypt.

The Hauser Global Law School Program’s 25th Anniversary will be celebrated in Fall 2019.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

AFFAIRES DE GARS: DIFFÉRENTES FAÇONS D'EMBRASSER ET LA SIGNIFICATION DE CES BAISERS

DIFFÉRENTES FAÇONS D'EMBRASSER ET LA SIGNIFICATION DE CES BAISERS RÉDACTION AFFAIRES DE GARS     29/10/2019 SÉDUCTION On connaît tous le baiser sur la joue, sur la main, dans le cou ou le gros "french" mouillé, tous des types de baiser qu'on donne ou reçoit ou partage au quotidien. Mais saviez-vous que chaque type de baiser cache sa signification, et qu'il existe vraiment beaucoup de façons d'embrasser? Dans cet article, on vous parle des 20 façons les plus populaires, et justement de la signification ou de l'interprétation de ces baisers. Généralement, vous venez de rencontrer une fille, votre objectif est de la "frencher" le plus rapidement possible pour lui démontrer votre intérêt, pour aussi mesurer la réciprocité de son intérêt face à vous, aussi pour savoir si elle embrasse bien, si la "chimie" opère, mais bien sûr, oui... pour le plaisir. Vous allez peut-être vous contenter du baiser sur la joue au début po

EGMONT Institute: Use Connectivity to Strengthen Multilateral Cooperation in the EU’s Neighbourhood

  Use Connectivity to Strengthen Multilateral Cooperation in the EU’s Neighbourhood By  Sven Biscop   (15 September 2020)   In   Commentaries Asia-Pacific ,   EU and strategic partners ,   EU strategy and foreign policy ,   European defence / NATO To strengthen multilateralism in their own neighbourhood, Germany and the EU should pursue connectivity strategies with their Eastern and Southern neighbours. These could create the links between the EU’s neighbours that  previous partnership agreements have failed to establish. They should include political and security dimensions for states to feel connected to  the EU in a political sense. This commentary was also published in  PeaceLab Blog (Photo credit: European Council, © European Union 2019)

The ROCKEFELLER FOUNDATION/ NATIONAL COVID-19 TESTING ACTION PLAN

The ROCKEFELLER FOUNDATION NATIONAL COVID-19 TESTING   ACTION PLAN Pragmatic steps to reopen our workplaces and our communities Foreword to National Covid-19 Testing Action Plan Covid-19 has infected hundreds of thousands of Americans and affected millions more around the world.  Across America, shuttered schools have put 30 million children at risk of going hungry. Closed businesses have left more than 20 million workers without income. And while locking down our economy is crucial for saving lives now, it has tremendous consequences for the poorest among us – as people of color and low-income Americans are disproportionately losing livelihoods, and lives. In the face of an ineffective nationally-coordinated response, insufficient data, and inadequate amounts of protective gear and testing, we need an exit plan. Testing is our way out of this crisis. Instead of ricocheting between an unsustainable shutdown and a dangerous, uncertain return to normal