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Ana Luquerna, '21, Selected for Judicial Fellowship Programme at the International Court of Justice


By Becky Beaupre Gillespie, Director of Content
May 26, 2021
Ana Luquerna
Ana Luquerna, ’21, a  JD candidate whose interest in international law began at age nine when her family was granted asylum by the United States
, will be a 2021-2022 judicial fellow at the International Court of Justice in the Hague, a highly competitive program designed to expose participants to international law and the work of the Court.
During law school, Luquerna worked for two years on the Law School’s Global Human Rights Clinic and one year on the Immigrants’ Rights Clinic, and served as articles editor on the
Chicago Journal of International Law, president of the Human Rights Law Society, vice president of the Immigration Law Society, and vice president of the Latinx Law Students Association. She also worked as a research assistant to Tom Ginsburg, the Leo Spitz Professor of International Law; engaged in pro bono projects focused on refugee and immigrant justice; an ....

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New UChicago course examines how Buddhism intersects with constitutional law


New Law School course brings scholars together to study intersection of religion, law
With an estimated 500 million followers worldwide, Buddhism has had a far-reaching impact on constitutional design and reform in many countries. Yet, the relationship between the religion and this area of law has been the subject of comparatively little academic scholarship.  
To help change that, a new interdisciplinary course at the University of Chicago Law School brought scholars from around the world together in a virtual format to study Buddhism’s relationship to constitutional practice.
The course, “Buddhism and Comparative Constitutional Law,” combined a winter seminar for students with a workshop series that allowed leading scholars of anthropology, political science, religion and law to present their ongoing work to a global audience. ....

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