Georgia Law student Isaac Clement (J.D. ’27) selected to participate in The Hague Academy of International Law’s Private International Law summer course

University of Georgia School of Law student Isaac Clement (J.D. ’27) was selected to participate in The Hague Academy of International Law‘s Private International Law summer course. This initiative will take place at the Peace Palace in The Hague, Netherlands.

Over the course of three weeks in the summer, Clement and others from around the world will engage in advanced study of international private law, international arbitration, and cross-border commercial transactions. These courses and lectures are taught by academics, practitioners, and diplomats from leading institutions around the world.

From The Academy’s website:

The Academy is a centre for teaching and research in public and private international law, with the aim of furthering the scientific study of the legal aspects of international relations. The United Nations General Assembly regularly expresses its appreciation “to the Hague Academy of International Law for the valuable contribution it continues to make to the Programme of Assistance, which has enabled candidates under the International Law Fellowship Programme to attend and participate in the Fellowship Programme in conjunction with courses at the Academy” and notes “the contributions of the Hague Academy to the teaching, study, dissemination and wider appreciation of international law, and calls upon Member States and interested organizations to give favourable consideration to the appeal of the Academy for a continuation of support and a possible increase in their financial contributions, to enable the Academy to carry out its activities, particularly those relating to the Summer and Winter Courses, regional courses and programmes of the Centre for Studies and Research in International Law and International relations.”

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