Doty named director of Dean Rusk International Law Center, Amann and Cohen to serve in supporting roles

Abstract

Thursday, August 10, 2017

Doty named director of Dean Rusk International Law Center, Amann and Cohen to serve in supporting roles

Athens, Ga. – Kathleen A. Doty has been appointed the director of the Dean Rusk International Law Center at the University of Georgia School of Law. She will be assisted by two faculty co-directors, Diane Marie Amann and Harlan G. Cohen.

Doty’s appointment took effect on August 1. Since May 2017, she had served as the center’s interim director. Doty joined the law school in 2015, serving first as associate director of global practice preparation and then as director of global practice preparation. Her portfolio included: planning and the implementation of lectures, conferences and other events; research projects; advising students interested in global legal practice; administering the Global Externships initiative; and coordinating and serving as a faculty member in the Global Governance Summer School, a 10-day offering in Europe conducted in partnership with the Leuven Centre for Global Governance Studies at the University of Leuven, Belgium.

As director, Doty will oversee both global practice preparation and international professional education, including the Master of Laws (LL.M.) degree for foreign-trained lawyers. Her duties as a member of the law faculty will include teaching the Legal System of the United States course to LL.M. candidates.

“We are very pleased that Kate Doty has agreed to take on this leadership role at the law school. I am confident that the center will benefit from her energy and extensive experience in the practice of international law,” School of Law Dean Peter B. “Bo” Rutledge said.

This autumn, the center will celebrate its 40th birthday. Its namesake is Dean Rusk, who was a law professor at UGA after serving as Secretary of State to Presidents John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson. The center serves as the law school’s international law and policy nucleus for education, scholarship and other collaborations among faculty and students, the law school community and diverse local and global partners. U.S. News & World Report ranks the law school’s international law program 18th among U.S. law schools.

Doty will be the fifth person to lead the center, following in the footsteps of Fredrick W. Huszagh, Thomas J. Schoenbaum, Gabriel M. Wilner, former Ambassador C. Donald Johnson Jr. and, most recently, Diane Marie Amann.

Amann, who holds the school’s Woodruff Chair in International Law, has just completed a term as the law school’s associate dean for international programs and strategic initiatives. An expert in public international law, she also serves as special adviser to the International Criminal Court prosecutor on children in and affected by armed conflict.

Amann will serve as the center’s faculty co-director with Cohen, who holds the Wilner/UGA Foundation Professorship in International Law. He is an international economic law expert and also serves as the managing editor of AJIL Unbound, the online platform of the American Journal of International Law.

“Diane provided excellent leadership for the center over the past two-plus years, creating a strong foundation on which Kate and her team will build,” Dean Rutledge said. “I am confident the law school’s influence in the area of international law and policy will continue to grow.”

Before joining the Dean Rusk International Law Center, Doty practiced treaty law in Washington, D.C., as assistant counsel for arms control and international law at the Office of the General Counsel, Strategic Systems Programs, U.S. Department of the Navy. Before that, she was attorney-editor at the D.C.-based American Society of International Law, where her duties included managing the American Journal of International Law and editing publications like ASIL Insights, International Law in Brief, International Legal Materials and the Benchbook on International Law. Her published writings cover issues such as the European Court of Human Rights, refugee law, transitional justice and the U.S. military commissions at Guantánamo.

She serves in leadership roles for the American Society of International Law, as chair of its Non-Proliferation, Arms Control, and Disarmament Interest Group and vice chair of its Lieber Society on the Law of Armed Conflict. In 2016, Doty was selected as a Young Leaders Fellow by the World Affairs Council of Atlanta and joined other fellows in a professional development tour of China.

While earning her J.D. at the University of California, Davis School of Law, she competed in the international rounds of the Philip C. Jessup International Law Moot Court Competition. After serving as a judicial clerk on the Hawaiʻi Intermediate Court of Appeals, she was the inaugural Fellow of the California International Law Center. She received her undergraduate degree from Smith College, with a major in Latin American Studies and a minor in Film Studies, and studied abroad at La Universidad de la Habana in Cuba. She is fluent in Spanish and proficient in French.

###

Note to Editors: images can be found at:

Doty: http://multimedia.uga.edu/media/images/KathleenDoty.jpg Amann: http://multimedia.uga.edu/media/images/Amann-headshot.jpg Cohen: http://multimedia.uga.edu/media/images/Cohen.jpg

Contact: Heidi M. Murphy, 706-583-5487, hmurphy@uga.edu

UGA School of Law Consistently regarded as one of the nation’s top public law schools, the School of Law was established in 1859. Its accomplished faculty includes authors of some of the country’s leading legal scholarship. The School of Law is proud of its long-standing commitment to providing first-rate legal training for future leaders who will serve state and society in both the public and private sectors. The school offers three degrees—the Juris Doctor, the Master of Laws and the Master in the Study of Law—and is home to the Dean Rusk International Law Center. For more information, see www.law.uga.edu.

Share

COinS