CONTACT DETAILS
Email:
Phone:
+ 1 212-636-6857
Twitter:
Curriculum Vitae:
Martin Flaherty
Leitner Family Professor
Co-Director, Leitner Center for International Law and Justice
Martin S. Flaherty is Leitner Family Professor of Law and Founding Co-Director of the Leitner Center for International Law and Justice at Fordham Law School. He is Charles and Marie Robertson Visiting Professor at the Princeton School of Public and International Affairs, and a Visiting Professor at Columbia Law School and Barnard College. Professor Flaherty has previously taught at China University of Political Science and Law and the National Judges College in Beijing, Sungkyunkwan University in Seoul, Queen’s University Belfast. Professor Flaherty earlier served as a law clerk for Justice Byron R. White of the U.S. Supreme Court and Chief Judge John Gibbons of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit.
Flaherty received a J.D. from Columbia Law School, where he was Book Reviews and Articles Editor of the Columbia Law Review, an M.A. and M.Phil., with distinction, from Yale (in history), and B.A. summa cum laude from Princeton. For the Leitner Center, Human Rights First, and the New York City Bar Association, he has led or participated in human rights missions to Northern Ireland, Turkey, Hong Kong, Mexico, Malaysia, Kenya, Romania and China. Professor Flaherty is currently the President of the American Association of the International Commission of Jurists, https://www.aaicj.org, a member of the Council on Foreign Relations, and a legal expert advisor at the Sixth Committee of the United Nations General Assembly.
Flaherty’s scholarly publications focus upon international human rights, foreign affairs, and constitutional law and history, and appear in such journals as the Columbia Law Review, the Yale Law Journal, the Michigan Law Review, the University of Chicago Law Review, Constitutional Commentary, the Harvard Journal of Law and Policy, and the Harvard Human Rights Journal. He has written, appeared, or been quoted in The New York Times, The Washington Post, The New Yorker, The Boston Globe, The Daily News, Newsday, the PBS Newshour, CNN, MSNBC, and NPR. He is also the author of the Restoring the Global Judiciary: Why the Supreme Court Should Rule in Foreign Affairs (Princeton University Press, 2019).
Career
EDUCATION
COLUMBIA, J.D., 1988
YALE, M. Phil., 1987; M.A., with distinction, 1982
PRINCETON, B.A., summa cum laude, 1981
TRINITY COLLEGE DUBLIN, ITT/Fulbright Fellow, 1981-82
HONORS
- Visiting Professor, Woodrow Wilson School of Public & International Affairs, Princeton University (2004-present)
- Visiting Professor, Columbia Law School, Columbia University (Spring 2011)
- Chair, Committee on International Human Rights, Association of the Bar of the City of New York (2003-06)
Publications
CONSTITUTIONAL AND FOREIGN RELATIONS LAW
- Restoring the Global Judiciary: Why the U.S. Supreme Court Should Rule in U.S. Foreign Affairs (2019)
- Restoring Separation of Powers in Foreign Affairs, 2 St. John’s Journal of International and Comparative Law 1 (2012)
- Judicial Foreign Relations Authority After 9/11, 56 New York Law School Law Review 121 (2012) [symposium on the tenth anniversary of 9/11]
INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS
- One Country, Which Direction?: Hong Kong 15 Years After the Handover, 51 COLUMBIA JOURNAL OF TRANSNATIONAL LAW 275 (2013)
- Keynote: ‘But for Wuhan?: Do Foreign Law Schools That Operate in Authoritarian Regimes Have Human Rights Obligations?,” 5 DREXEL LAW REVIEW (2013)

