Harlan G. Cohen
Assistant Professor of Law
B.A., M.A., Yale University
J.D., New York University
Courses Offered:
International Human Rights
International Criminal Law
Foreign Affairs and the Constitution
International Law Colloquium
Professional Biographical Information:
Harlan G. Cohen has joined the Georgia Law faculty as an assistant professor specializing in international law.
Cohen
came to Georgia Law from the New York University School of Law where he
was a Furman Fellow and researched national security law, international
law and legal history.
Previously, he worked at
the New York law firm Cleary, Gottlieb, Steen & Hamilton as an
associate and served as a judicial clerk for Judge Wilfred Feinberg of
the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 2nd Circuit. Cohen also interned in
the U.S. Attorney's Office and for U.S. District Court Judge Shira A.
Scheindlin, both in the Southern District of New York. Before entering
law school, Cohen worked at the Washington Institute for Near East
Policy and at the journal Foreign Affairs.
His scholarship includes: "Finding International Law: Rethinking the Doctrine of Sources" in the Iowa Law Review, "Supremacy and Diplomacy: The International Law of the U.S. Supreme Court" in the Berkeley Journal of International Law, "The American Challenge to International Law: A Tentative Framework for Debate" in the Yale Journal of International Law and "The (Un) Favorable Judgment of History: Deportation Hearings, the Palmer Raids, and the Meaning of History" in the New York University Law Review.
Cohen
is a member of the American Society of International Law, the New York
State Bar Association, the American Bar Association and the
International Human Rights Committee of the Association of the Bar of
the City of New York.
He earned a dual degree in history and
international studies from Yale University before receiving an M.A. in
history. In 2003, he graduated magna cum laude from the New
York University School of Law, where he was a Florence Allen Scholar
and was inducted into the Order of the Coif. Additionally, Cohen served
as the articles editor of the New York University Law Review
and received the Washington Foreign Law Society's Justice Robert H.
Jackson Prize for best published student writing on a topic of
international/foreign law.
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