Acting Director of the Human Rights Clinic Publishes Article in the Clinical Law Review

Tamar Ezer’s scholarship focuses on the intersection of health and human rights, housing and homelessness, and women’s and children’s rights.
Acting Director of the Human Rights Clinic Publishes Article in the Clinical Law Review
Tamar Ezer

Lecturer in Law Tamar Ezer, acting director of the Human Rights Clinic and faculty director of the Human Rights Program, recently published an article “Integrating Human Rights in Domestic Clinical Practice” in the Clinical Law Review, along with Elizabeth Brundige of Cornell University Law School, Aya Fujimura-Fanselow, Duke University School of Law, and Ryan Thoreson of Yale Law School. The article introduces readers to human rights norms and strategies as potential teaching and advocacy tools, providing practical case studies and exploring both opportunities and challenges.

Prior to working at the Human Rights Clinic at Miami Law, Ezer Ezer taught and supervised projects at Yale Law School as a Lecturer in Law, Visiting Scholar with the Schell Center for International Human Rights, and Executive Director of the Solomon Center for Health Law and Policy.  Ezer further taught International Women’s Rights at Tulane Law School’s summer program and in the Georgetown University Law Center’s International Women’s Human Rights Clinic, where she supervised test cases challenging discriminatory laws and oversaw fact-finding and legislative projects in Nigeria, Swaziland, Tanzania, Uganda, and the Philippines.

Her research focuses on the intersection of health and human rights, housing and homelessness, access to justice, women’s rights, children’s rights, and human rights pedagogy. Her articles have been published in various journals, including the Cardozo Law ReviewYale Human Rights and Development Journal, Harvard’s Health and Human Rights Journal, the Georgetown Journal of Gender and the Law, and the European Journal of Health Law.



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