Ukrainian Student Graduates with LL.M. Degree

Iryna Shalinska's career path includes an unplanned pivot to Miami Law and sitting for the New York Bar Exam.
Ukrainian Student Graduates with LL.M. Degree
Iryna Shalinska at Commencement

Two years ago, Iryna Shalinska was building a career as lead legal counsel at Recycling Solutions, a strategic byproduct and waste management company based in Kyiv, Ukraine.

There, she conducted audits, built the company's corporate governance processes, maintained legal support for compliance and investment projects, conducted due diligence, and prepared legal opinions.

Then came February 24, 2022, when Russia invaded her country.

Shalinska is from Lviv, a city in the western part of Ukraine, where her family still lives and where she obtained her master's and Ph.D. in law from Ivan Franko National University. She and her friends fled to Germany, where she continued to work remotely from Bad Bentheim, more than 1,000 miles from Ukraine.

Shalinska applied and was accepted to Miami Law's International Law LL.M., specializing in U.S. & Transnational Law, on a full scholarship from Miami Law with a generous stipend from Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe LLP law firm to cover all fees, living expenses and other associates costs.

At Miami Law, she focused on U.S. and international law topics.

"My professional interests are now highly concentrated around international law," she said, "which is the motivation of every Ukrainian now."

Scholarship and support

Soon after the invasion, Miami Law announced scholarship opportunities to graduates of a Ukrainian law school; International arbitration lawyer Anastasiia Sydorenko was the first to arrive.

Additionally, the law firm of Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe LLP partnered with a gift to create the Orrick Graduate Law Student Support Fund at Miami Law to provide financial assistance for fees and living expenses to Miami Law graduate students pursuing an LL.M. degree who are experiencing financial and other personal hardship due to events in Ukraine

The fund provides financial assistance for fees and living expenses to graduate students pursuing an LL.M. degree at Miami Law experiencing financial or other personal hardship due to events in Ukraine.

"This is a global humanitarian crisis—and our team felt compelled to take action," said Siobhan Handley, chief talent officer for the San Francisco-headquartered international law firm. "Of course, we have team members and clients with ties to Ukraine, although it goes beyond that. Witnessing the bravery and perseverance of the Ukrainian people only strengthened our commitment. Can you imagine being a Ukrainian law student today? Their education will enable them to play a leading role their nation's recovery–and it's an honor to be able to support that and to do it with Miami Law." 

Miami Law welcomed Shalinska, the second student under its scholarship program in support of graduates of Ukrainian law schools in spring 2023, to one of its international LL.M. programs, where she wrote about the war and its consequences in her written essays and articles at Miami Law.

"I am honored and very grateful for such an opportunity in life. For me it is not only a possibility to give a new start to my career but also a chance to spread information about the situation in Ukraine and to be useful with my new skills and knowledge," said Shalinska.

"We all have to do our part to show our support for Ukraine," said Professor Caroline M. Bradley, Dean's Distinguished Scholar and associate dean for International and Graduate Law Programs.

With one of the highest numbers of faculty members who teach or do scholarly research in the area of international law of any American law school, the University of Miami School of Law is renowned for its global and international law programs. With an extensive course catalog in international, foreign, and comparative law, Miami Law prepares students to work in a transnational global environment, address significant international law issues, and practice and engage with global policy issues. 

"We believe that our strong international programs and our faculty expertise in international law, international human rights, international finance and trade, and international dispute resolution, among other subjects, can really benefit Ukrainian law graduates looking to contribute scholarly work that can support the heroic efforts of Ukrainian people now and in the future," said Bradley.

Miami Law supports additional Ukrainian students by facilitating job opportunities on campus and with law firms and offering generous scholarships.

Read more abourt Miami Law's LL.M. Programs