B.A, Harvard, 1970; Ph.D. 1977. Atherton Prize fellow and Resident Tutor in Government in Leverett House, Harvard, 1971-75. Lecturer in International Studies, University of Warwick (UK), 1975-76. Assistant professor of Public and International Affairs, Woodrow Wilson School, Princeton, 1977-84. Assistant secretary-general and special adviser to United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan, 2001-2003.
Professor Doyle specializes in international relations theory, international security, and international organizations.
Lori Damrosch
B.A., Yale, 1973; J.D., Yale, 1976. Law clerk to Judge Jon O. Newman, 1976-77. Served in the Office of the Legal Adviser, U.S. Department of State, through 1980, with responsibilities including European and Canadian affairs, international antitrust, aviation, and trade; was special assistant to the legal adviser in 1980. Associate, Sullivan & Cromwell, 1981-84. Joined the Columbia faculty in 1984.
Publications include The International Court of Justice at a Crossroads (ed., 1987); Law and Force in the New International Order (ed., 1991); Enforcing Restraint: Collective Intervention in Internal Conflicts (ed., 1993); Beyond Confrontation: International Law for the Post-Cold War Era (ed. 1995); Enforcing International Law through Non-Forcible Measures (Hague Academy of International Law, 1997); and International Law: Cases and Materials (4th ed., with Henkin, Pugh, Schachter and Smit, 2001). Co-editor-in-chief, American Journal of International Law, since 2003.
Professor Damrosh is an expert in the areas of international law and the U.S. law of foreign relations.
George Fletcher
B.A., California (Berkeley), 1960 ; J.D., Chicago, 1964; M.C.L., 1965. Began teaching law in 1965. Professor of law at the University of California (Los Angeles), 1969-83. Joined the Columbia faculty in 1983. Visiting professorships in Jerusalem, 1972-73 and 1993; Harvard, 1973-74; Yale, 1977; Frankfurt, 1980; Budapest, 1990; Brussels, 1991; Toronto, 2001; and Hamburg, 2002.
Publications include: Rethinking Criminal Law (1978), which received an Order of the Coif award (1980), A Crime of Self-Defense: Bernhard Goetz and the Law on Trial (1988), which received the ABA Silver Gavel Award (1989), Loyalty: An Essay on the Morality of Relationships (1993), With Justice for Some: Victims' Rights in Criminal Trials (1995), Basic Concepts of Legal Thought (1996); Basic Concepts of Criminal Law (1998), Our Secret Constitution: How Lincoln Redefined American Democracy (2001), designated by the American Association of Publishers as the best book on law published in 2001, Romantics at War: Glory and Guilt in the Age of Terrorism (2002), American Law in a Global Context: The Basics, co-authored with Steve Sheppard (2005).
Richard Gardner
A.B., Harvard, 1948; J.D., Yale, 1951; D.Phil., Oxford, 1954. Rhodes Scholar. Note editor, Yale Law Journal. After practicing law for three years with Coudert Brothers (New York) joined the Columbia faculty in 1957. Joined the Kennedy Administration as deputy assistant secretary of state for international organization affairs, 1961-65. U.S. Ambassador to Italy, 1977-81. U.S. Ambassador to Spain, 1993-97. Former member of the President's Advisory Committee on Trade Policy and Negotiations.
Publications include Sterling-Dollar Diplomacy (1956); Blueprint for Peace (1966); The Global Partnership: International Agencies and Economic Development (ed., with Millikan, 1968); In Pursuit of World Order (1980); Negotiating Survival: Four Priorities after Rio(1992); and Mission Italy: On the Front Lines of the Cold War (2005).
Louis Henkin
B.A., Yeshiva, 1937; LL.B. Harvard, 1940; L.H.D., Yeshiva, 1963; LL.D. Columbia 1995; J.D. (hon.), Brooklyn, 1997. Book review editor, Harvard Law Review. Law clerk to Judge Learned Hand and to Justice Felix Frankfurter.
Professor Henkin divides his time and interests among constitutional law, international law, law and diplomacy, and human rights, and has made specialties of the law of American foreign relations and international and comparative human rights.
Petros Mavroidis
1991: Dr iuris, University of Heidelberg, Germany 1986: LL.M in Law, University of California at Berkeley. 1984: LL.M in EC Law, Institut d'Etudes Européennes, U.L.B, Brussels. 1982: Ptihion (LL.B) in Law, University of Thessaloniki, Faculty of Law and Economic Science.
American Law Institute (ALI): Appointed Chief Co-Rapporteur in December 2001 to the project "Principles Of Trade Law: The World Trade Organization". International Law Association: Co-Rapporteur at the International Trade Law Committee. Council of the World Trade Law Association: Member of the Board. World Trade Review: Editorial Board Journal of World Trade: Associate Editor. Columbia Journal Of Transnational Law: Member of the Board of Advisors. Columbia Journal Of European Law: Member of the Board Of Advisors Global Trade And Finance Series, Kluwer Publishing: Member of the Advisory Board Centre for Economic Policy Research (CEPR) Fellow. American Society of International Law: Member.
Peter Rosenblum
A.B., Columbia, 1982; J.D., Northwestern, 1986; LL.M., Columbia, 1992; D.E.A. with distinction, University of Paris I (Panthéon-Sorbonne), 1992. Staff attorney, Lawyers Committee for Human Rights, 1989-91. In-country human rights advisor, based in Romania, International Human Rights Law Group, 1992-93. Consultant, Human Rights Watch/Africa Watch, 1992-93. Program director, International Human Rights Law Group. Human Rights Officer, United Nations Human Rights Center, Switzerland, 1995-96.
Professor Rosenblum has engaged in human rights research and field missions in Africa, Eastern Europe, and Asia. His recent writing addresses human rights topics affecting Africa and human rights pedagogy in the United States.
Karl Sauvant
Dr. Karl P. Sauvant is the Executive Director of the Columbia Program on International Investment, Lecturer in Law at Columbia Law School and Special Advisor to the UN Millennium Project. He is also Guest Professor at Nankai University, China.
Dr. Sauvant joined the United Nations in 1973 and, as of 1975, has focused his work on matters related to FDI. Since 1988, he was responsible for the Organization's policy analysis work on FDI. In 2001, he became Director of DITE. His responsibilities included managing the Division; promoting international consensus-building in the areas of FDI, technology and enterprise development; providing intellectual leadership for policy-oriented research; and conceptualizing and supervising technical assistance activities in this field.Apart from his work for the United Nations, he has published extensively on issues related to economic development, FDI and services. His name is associated with some 150 United Nations publications on FDI over the past three decades.
Dr. Sauvant received a Ph.D. degree from the University of Pennsylvania