Hauser Global Law School Program Seeks Research Assistants for Fall 2014 (2L, 3L, LLM)
The Hauser Global Law School Program is currently accepting applications for Research Assistants for our fall Global Faculty. The position allows up to 20 hours per week at $12 per hour. Projects will include assisting professors with course materials as well as their own research.
Below you will find a list of faculty with their home institutions, plus any skills or experience required by the faculty member. Research Assistants will either be appointed for fall or the academic year and may only assist one professor per semester. The professors will be located at NYU School of Law during the fall 2014 semester.
Please submit resume and cover letter(s) indicating which professor(s) you are interested in working with and why by Monday, August 11, 2014 to: law.global@nyu.edu.
Fareda Banda
School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London
Courses: Human Rights of Women; Law and Society in Africa
Research: Gender and Human Rights
Preferred Experience: Knowledge of African legal systems and/or international women’s rights.
Eyal Benvenisti
Tel Aviv University Faculty of Law
Courses: Humanitarian Law of Armed Conflicts; Sovereignty and the Future of International Law
Research: International Law, Constitutional Law, Administrative Law
Preferred Experience: Interest in international law.
Stefan Grundmann
Humboldt University; European University Institute
Course: Comparative Contract Law
Research: Banking and Capital Market Law, Company Law, Contract Law, Private Law Theory, Transnational Law Theory
Preferred Experience: Knowledge of how to use law databases and libraries. Some knowledge of German and possibly French would be a plus, but is not required.
Frederic Jenny
ESSEC Business School
Courses: Antitrust: International and Comparative; Globalization and Law: An Economic Perspective on International Trade and Competition
Research: Law and economics, Antitrust law, Globalization, International Trade and Economic Development
Preferred Experience: Some training in antitrust law and an understanding of economics. Knowledge of (at least some) developing countries would also be appreciated.