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Contributors


Lawrence O. Gostin is University Professor and Faculty Director of the O’Neill Institute for National and Global Health Law at George- town University. He directs the WHO Collaborating Center on Public Health Law and Human Rights.


Eric A. Friedman is a Fellow at the O’Neill Institute for National and Global Health Law, George- town University. Previously, Eric was Senior Global Health Policy Advisor at Physicians for Hu- man Rights, where he focused on the global shortage of health workers, and sought to increase the extent to which U.S. global health policy incorporates the human right to health.


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George E. Edwards is the C.M. Gray Professor of Law and Facul- ty Director (Founding), Program in International Human Rights Law, Indiana University School of Law, Indianapolis. He is also the Faculty Director (Founding/ Former) of the Master of Laws (LL.M.) Track in International Hu- man Rights Law at Indiana.


Justina LaSalle is a student at Loyola University College of Law, New Orleans. While in law school, she has clerked for the Southern Poverty Law Center, the Southeast Louisiana Legal Services, and volunteered with the Coalition to Restore Coastal Louisiana. Currently, she is a stu- dent practitioner in her school’s Community Justice Clinic where she works on fair housing cases.


Mollie Dapolito is a law student at Vermont Law School (VLS). While at VLS, she clerked for the Hon. Charles J. Siragusa of the U.S. District Court for the West- ern District of New York, worked at the South Royalton Legal Clinic, completed a pro bono in- ternship for the Southeast Loui- siana Legal Services, and was a Clean Energy Legal Intern for Environment America in Wash- ington, D.C. where she lobbied Congress for clean energy and climate legislation.


Giuliana Quattrocchi is a law student at Catania University School of Law in Catania, Italy. While a law student, she took part in both Italian and Interna- tional moot court competitions, including the Jessup Competi- tion. She also worked as Head Delegate for students attend- ing the Model UN simulations in New York City, and served as Chief Officer for the ILSA Chap- ter at Catania School of Law.


James Foster is a law student at New York Law School (NYLS) and a Fellow of the Global Law, Justice & Policy Institute. While at NYLS he completed an extern- ship in the International Justice division of Human Rights Watch, spent a summer working on a legal documentary about Propo- sition 8 in California, and is now an intern at a private consulting firm. Prior to law school, James was a Peace Corps volunteer stationed in the West Indies.


Aaron Lukken is a student at University of Missouri-Kansas City School of Law, where he is Chief Justice of the Moot Court Board and Research Assistant in the Continuing Legal Education office. Prior to law school, Aaron spent a decade at Southwestern Bell Telephone Co. as a sales rep- resentative, serving a term as a labor steward with the Commu- nications Workers of America.


Christine Long is a student at New York Law School where she is an Associate of the Center for International Law. She graduated from Georgia Tech with a degree in International Affairs and has studied in Oxford, England and Valencia, Spain. She is currently interning at Giordano Law Of- fices in New York City.


Kristen Klump is a law student at Temple University, Beasley School of Law. While at Temple, Kristen served as a founding member of the recently revived Temple International Law Soci- ety and as a staff member on the Temple Law Review. Kristen is currently studying Chinese law at Tsinghua University in Beijing.


Dominique de Vastey is a student at Washington University and is on the Executive Board of the In- ternational Law Society and Im- migration Law Society. Before law school, she taught English at a French university and volun- teered at SOS Racisme, a French anti-discrimination organization.


ILSA Quarterly » volume 20 » issue 1 » October 2011


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