Visiting Scholars join Osgoode for fall term

Visiting Scholars 2017

Osgoode is delighted to have the following four Visiting Scholars join the Law School during the fall term:

Ali Acar (top left), who holds a PhD degree from the European University Institute, explored the issues surrounding Judicial Review of Constitutional Amendments in his PhD thesis. His current research interests are Constitutional Theory, Comparative Constitutional Law, Legal Theory, International Human Rights and Empirical Studies of Law.

Jean Dryden (LLM ’15) (top right) is an information professional with more than 25 years’ experience as a staff archivist and archival administrator. She is interested in the impact of copyright on archival practice. She represents the International Council on Archives (ICA) at the World Intellectual Property Organization’s Copyright Committee in Geneva, and is a member of the ICA’s Expert Group on Legal Matters. Her current research brings the perspective of cultural heritage institutions to the study of copyright, with particular focus on the operation of copyright law in relation to the archival holdings of archives, libraries and museums.

Lénárd Sándor (bottom left) is a chief counsel at the Constitutional Court of Hungary and also a lecturer of international law and researcher at the Pázmány Péter Catholic University in Budapest. His main area of interest is international investment law and its impacts on countries in Central Europe. He obtained his law degree in 2006 at Pázmány Péter Catholic University and his MBA in 2011 at Canisius College in Buffalo, NY. He is now preparing his PhD in international investment law at Pázmány Péter Catholic University.

Mustafa Farooq (bottom right) has a JD degree from the University of Alberta and an LLM from UC Berkeley School of Law where he completed a thesis on criminal sentencing principles in Islamic law. He was called to the Bar in 2016, and upon completion of the Visiting Scholar program, will clerk for Justice Glennys McVeigh at the Federal Court of Canada. Farooq’s research project while at Osgoode will be to look at the policy and legal regime of Countering Violent Extremism (CVE) from a critical race theory perspective.