Dr. Sarah CLEVELAND
CV
1993-1994 | Supreme Court of the United States, Washington D.C., Law clerk |
1999 | Erlenborn Commission, U.S. Legal Services Corporation, expert to five-member federal commission reviewing the provision of legal services to aliens in the United States. |
2003 | Afghanistan Transitional Commercial Law Project Working Group. Expert on ABA-sponsored project responsible for drafting transitional labor and employment code for post-Taliban Afghanistan. |
2001-1997 | University of Texas School of Law, Assistant Professor |
since 2001 | Professor. Teaching and research in U.S. foreign relations law, international human and labor right, and federal civil procedure |
Mitgliedschaften
2001-2004 Rhodes Scholarship Selection Committee, Texas, State Secretary | |
since 2002 Advisory Council, International Labor Rights Fund | |
since 2002 Legal Advisory Council, Center for Justice and Accountability | |
since 1998 American Society of International Law |
Publikationen
2001 Human Rights Sanctions and the World Trade Organization, in Human Rights, The Environment, and The Liveralization of International Trade | |
2001 Crosby and the "One Voice" Myth in U.S. Foreign Relations, 46 Villanova L. Rev. 975 | |
2002 Human Rights Sanstions and International Trade: A Theory of Compatibility, JIEL 133 | |
2002 Powers Inherent in Sovereignty: Indians, Aliens, Territories, and the Nineteenth Century Orgins of Plenary Power over Foreign Relations, 81 TEXAS L. REV. 1 |
Auszeichnungen
2001 Harry A. Blackmun Fellow to the Alpen Justice & Society Institute, Aspen, CO | |
2000-2001 Excellence Teaching Award, University of Texas School of Law | |
2002 Manuskript, Powers Inherent in Sovereignty: Indians, Aliens, Territories and the Nineteenth-Century Orgins of Plenary Power Over Foreign Affairs, Constitutional Law-Historical Foundations selection at Third Annual Stanford Yale Junior Faculty Forum, Yale Law School |