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Yuval
Merin
2004 Williams Institute Visiting Scholar
Please join the Williams Institute in welcoming Professor
Yuval Merin as the third Williams Institute Visiting Scholar.
Professor Merin will be on the UCLA School of Law campus as
part of the Williams Institute faculty during the 2004 spring
semester in order to continue his research and writing on
gender, sexuality and the law.
Professor Merin received an LL.B. (J.D. equivalent, 1993)
from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, a Masters of Laws,
with a concentration in International and Constitutional Law
(1997), and a Doctor of Judicial Science (2000), both from
New York University School of Law. In Jerusalem, he worked
as a legal assistant at the Civil Legal Aid Association
(1991-2), as a legal intern at Moshe Argov & Co. (1993), and
as a judicial clerk for Justice Mishael Cheshin in the
Supreme Court of Israel (1993-4). In New York, Merin worked
as a legal advisor at Trachtenberg & Rodes and as a research
assistant for Professors David A. J. Richards and Ronald
Dworkin.
Professor Merin has taught at Haifa University School of
Law and Tel Aviv University School of Law. He is currently a
senior law lecturer and full-time faculty member at the
College of Management School of Law in Tel Aviv, Israel.
Professor Merin's areas of teaching include Civil Procedure;
Sexuality, Gender and the Law; and International Protection
of Human Rights.
RECENT PUBLICATIONS
-
EQUALITY FOR SAME-SEX COUPLES: THE LEGAL RECOGNITION OF GAY
PARTNERSHIPS IN EUROPE AND THE UNITED STATES, Chicago,
University of Chicago Press 2002.
-
The Case Against Official Monolingualism: The Idiosyncrasies
of Minority Language Rights in Israel and the United States,
6 ILSA J INT’L & COMP L 1 (1999).
-
Symposium Proceedings: Recent Developments in International
Law: Models for the Legal Recognition and Regulation of
Same-Sex Partnerships: A Comparative Overview, 26 N.Y.U.
REV. L. & SOC. CHANGE 169 (2001).
-
Same-Sex Marriage and the Failure of Alternatives for the
Regulation of Gay Partnerships, 7 HAMISHPAT 253 (2002)
[Hebrew].
See complete list of
Williams Institute Visiting Scholars
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