A career in international law often allows lawyers to put their “briefcases on the ground” and interact with interesting groups and individuals globally. We have worked with government officials, rebels leaders, and UN Envoys in countries ranging from Yemen to Kenya to Burma and many more. This gallery is a collection of images of lawyers practicing international law around the world.
Advising the Karen National Union during their bilateral peace negotiations with the Government of Burma
Advising on design of federal states in Nepal
Election monitoring in Nagorno Karabakh
Advising during the Darfur peace negotiations
Community consultations in preparation for the Abyei arbitration.
Providing legal counsel to the Montenegrin government for the independence referendum
Gathering documentation during Abyei arbitration
Advising on the Cyprus peace negotiations
Abyei Arbitration
Advising on the development of a new Iraqi constitution.
Advising Burmese ethnic groups on peace talks
In Sri Lanka with the Secretariat of the Ministry of Consitutional Affairs
Advising the government of Georgia on peace negotiations
Civil Society outreach in Tanzania on the issue of women’s empowerment.
Representing PILPG at the ICC Review Conference in Kampala, Uganda
Advising during the Darfur peace negotiations
Advising on the development of a new Libyan constitution.
Community mapping group at the Abyei arbitration
Presenting the draft statute for a Syrian War Crimes Tribunal at the National Press Club
Documentation team for Abyei arbitration
Talking Foreign Policy radio show
Making recommendations on child piracy at the UN Contact Group for Somali Piracy in Copenhagen
At the Darfur ceasefire negotiations
Advising on transitional justice in Kenya
Advising on consitutional reform in South Sudan
Writing the Prosecution’s briefs on admissibility of Joint Criminal Liability as a theory of liability at the Cambodia Genocide Tribunal
Explaining outcome of Abyei arbitration
Advising on consitutional reform in Egypt
Working with Burmese ethnic groups
