Georgia Law students attend ASIL annual meeting through professional development scholarships

This year, two University of Georgia School of Law students volunteered at the 118th Annual Meeting of the American Society of International Law in Washington, D.C. Pictured above, they are, from left, LL.M. student M. Mushfiqur Rahman and 3L Caroline Bailey. This year’s ASIL Annual Meeting convened with the theme “International Law in an Interdependent World.”

The Louis B. Sohn Professional Development Fellowship, awarded by the law school’s Dean Rusk International Law Center, supported the Bailey’s travel to the conference. Rahman was supported by a new scholarship, the Naresh Gehi Annual Award.

Reflecting on the most memorable panel discussions she attended during the conference, Bailey stated:

“I particularly enjoyed the panel titled ‘If Nature has Rights, Who Speaks on its Behalf?’ Tribal Attorney and Director of CDER’s Tribal Rights of Nature Program, Frank Bibeau, Senior Lecturer and ARC Research Fellow at the University of Melbourne Law School, Dr. Erin O’Donnell, and Director at the Max Planck Institute for Comparative Public Law and International Law in Heidelberg, Anne Peters provided valuable perspectives and insightful commentary on the role of international lawyers in the protection of and advocacy for the legal rights of the environment. It was interesting to hear about the balance between environmental rights and sustainable development, as well as the recent developments around the world in establishing rights for rivers.

Rahman explained how meaningful these types of experiences can be for law students, especially LL.M.s:

“In building a legal career in the U.S. market, and especially with the difficulty of being an international student, one must not stop learning and developing his expertise in their chosen field. This is a long continuous process To that end, it is very necessary to take advantage of opportunities like the ASIL Annual Meeting. Attending the meeting is also helpful for students with ambitions who want not just to see themselves working in big law firms, but working on a bigger platform from a variety of viewpoints.

To read prior posts about Georgia Law students volunteering at the ASIL Annual Meeting, please click here, here, and here.

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