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LL.M. Master of Laws


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Pursue scholarly research or a track to qualify for practice in California or New York.


LL.M. Master of Laws


Pursue scholarly research or a track to qualify for practice in California or New York.


Programs


Open the door to global legal practice by combining your foreign law degree with a U.S. J.D. (Juris Doctor) degree.


Open the door to global legal practice by combining your foreign law degree with a U.S. J.D. (Juris Doctor) degree.


S.J.D. Doctor of Juridical Science


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S.J.D. Doctor of Juridical Science


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Pursue in-depth research on U.S. legal topics or in any of our areas of special expertise.


Pursue in-depth research on U.S. legal topics or in any of our areas of special expertise.


www.law.uiowa.edu/prospective law-admissions@uiowa.edu 319.335.9095


www.law.uiowa.edu/prospective law-admissions@uiowa.edu


Graduate Law


Graduate Law


2 yr J.D. for Foreign-Trained Lawyers


Country Watch


the effectiveness of the deal. There is currently a bill in the U.S. Senate that supports harsher sanc- tions on Iran if the negotiations fail. The bill is called the Nuclear Weapon Free Iran Act of 2013. Presi- dent Obama has vowed to veto the bipartisan bill if it should ever reach him. The White House, with Secretary of State Kerry as the biggest proponent of these negotiations, has asked Congress to give diplomacy a chance during these talks.


Such internal hurdles are not just present in the United States. Many hardliners in the Iranian government have expressed contradictory state- ments about the negotiations. The new president of Iran, Hassan Rouhani, and his foreign minister, Zarif, have achieved the most progress in talks over the past decade. However, some groups in- side the country are skeptical of the negotiations. Even though Rouhani has the support and back- ing of the Supreme Leader, he has expressed in- consistent statements of criticism about the talks in his speeches. Reaching a permanent deal will mean a new beginning to reconstruct years of mistrust between the two sides.


* Submitted by Saiena Shafiezadeh Kosovo Holds First Local Elections Since 2008


On Sunday November 3, 2013, Kosovo held elec- tions for mayors and local councilors. It was the first such election in Kosovo after the 2008 Decla- ration of Independence was approved by the ma- jority Albanian Kosovar parliament.


International media focused on instances of vio- lence and threats at three specific polling locations in an ethnic Serb-dominated area north of Kosovo. In one polling place, masked men overran security and destroyed voting material. Outside other poll- ing places north of the city of Mitrovica, hard-line Serbs intimidated other Serbs away from the poll- ing place, fearing that the vote would give legiti- macy to Kosovo’s declaration of independence. As Kosovo’s Deputy Foreign Minister, Petrit Selimi,


ILSA Quarterly » volume 22 » issue 3 » February 2014


of Law Graduate Law


University of Iowa Co te LawG


University of Iowa College of Law


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