Mortimer Sellers has been director of the University of Baltimore Center for International and Comparative Law since 1994.
[citation needed] James Maxeiner is the associate director of the Center for International and Comparative Law.
In October 2016, she spoke at the United Nations as part of a panel discussion titled “Gender Balance and Diversity in International Adjudication: A Glass Ceiling?
"[1][2] In April 2017, Grossman was named to an independent panel that will assess six nominees competing for three vacant positions on the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights.
[3][4] Eric Easton is a Senior Research Associate in UBalt's Center for International and Comparative Law and coordinator of CICL's China-related programs.
She is also a Junior Expert with the ABA-UNDP International Legal Resource Center, most recently advising them on the Draft Cybercrime Law in Cambodia and how it interferes with international human rights standards on the freedom of expression and right to privacy.
The series dedicates each volume to the most pressing contemporary problems in legal theory and social justice.
AMINTAPHIL holds biennial meetings of leading scholars in philosophy, law, and politics to discuss the philosophical basis of vital questions.
ASIL Studies in International Legal Theory is a book series published by Cambridge University Press and edited by Center Director Mortimer Sellers and Elizabeth Andersen, executive director of the American Society of International Law.
The series raises the level of public and scholarly discussion about the structure and purposes of the world legal order and how best to achieve global justice through law.
The purpose of the Association is the cultivation and promotion of legal and social philosophy at both the national and the international level.
The national sections are autonomous with respect to the organization of their events and also solely responsible for their financial affairs.