Georgia Law Professor Desirée LeClercq receives interdisciplinary research award

University of Georgia School of Law Professor Desirée LeClercq has received a 2025 Teaming for Interdisciplinary Research (TIS) Pre-Seed Award for the research project “Trade and the Future of Transnational Work.” She is part of a collaborative team that includes faculty from the Benson-Bertsch Center for International Trade & Security (CITS), the School of Public and International Affairs (SPIA), the Department of Geography, the School of Law, and the Terry College of Business.

UGA’s Office of Research, in partnership with the Office of the Provost, provides “pre-seed” funding to facilitate the formation of faculty teams and collaboration around critical areas of research expertise or emerging research topics. The goal is to stimulate large-scale research team formation and position UGA faculty groups to be more competitive in attracting resources for collaborative research, including internal UGA seed grants and ultimately, external grant support.

LeClercq joined the University of Georgia School of Law in 2024 as an assistant professor. She teaches Contracts, International Trade and Workers Rights, International Labor Law, International Law and U.S. Labor Law, and Public International Law. She also serves as a faculty co-director of the Dean Rusk International Law Center and as the faculty adviser for the Georgia Journal of International and Comparative Law

Margaret Mullins, former Senior Advisor to the Deputy Secretary of Defense, speaks about careers in national security at Georgia Law

Margaret Mullins, former Senior Advisor to the Deputy Secretary of Defense and current Director of Public Options and Governance at the Vanderbilt Policy Accelerator, delivered a talk this week to University of Georgia School of Law students entitled: “A Conversation with Margaret Mullins: Career Opportunities in National Security”.

In conversation with Georgia Law student Isaac Clement (J.D. ’27), Mullins discussed her career trajectory in national security. She provided law students with an overview of her educational background as well as her work in the Army, on Capitol Hill, with the U.S. Department of Defense, and in academia. She answered questions from law students about military and national security law, the intersections of law and policy, considerations for political and apolitical work, the importance of international education and language learning, and general advice for students interested in national security careers.

This talk was co-sponsored by the International Law Society, Armed Forces Association, Middle Eastern Law Students Association, and Law Democrats.

Students were invited to continue the conversation at Mullins’ evening lecture, “The Myths of the Last Supper: The Lessons of History and the Future of Defense Procurement”, presented as part of the Benson-Bertsch Center for International Trade & Security‘s 2025-2026 Global Decisions Lecture Series. Mullins discussed her recent publication about the history of defense procurement in the United States, debunking several myths surrounding the impacts of the 1993 “Last Supper.”

Mullins is the Director of Public Options and Governance at the Vanderbilt Policy Accelerator, where she researches and writes on defense acquisition and civil service reform. She is also an Assistant Adjunct Professor at Georgetown University’s Center for Security Studies.

Previously, Mullins served as Senior Advisor to the Deputy Secretary of Defense and as Senior Advisor for National Security to the Chair of the U.S. Export-Import Bank. Earlier in her career, she worked in the U.S. Senate on defense and foreign policy issues, including as national security advisor to Georgia Senator Raphael Warnock, and served as an intelligence officer in the U.S. Army, deploying to Afghanistan in 2013.

Mullins holds a BSFS from Georgetown University’s School of Foreign Service, an MPA from Princeton University’s School of Public and International Affairs, and a JD from Georgetown University Law Center. She has been a Council on Foreign Relations Term Member and is a member of the Truman National Security Project.