Sarah Cleveland

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Sarah Cleveland
Sarah.Cleveland.428.jpg
Legal Adviser of the Department of State
Nominee
Assuming office
TBD
PresidentJoe Biden
SecretaryAntony Blinken
SucceedingRichard C. Visek (acting)
Personal details
NationalityUnited States
Alma materBrown University (BA)
Oxford University (M.St.)
Yale Law School (JD)
OccupationLaw professor
Known forExpert on international law

Sarah Hull Cleveland is an American law professor and noted expert in international law and the constitutional law of U.S. foreign relations, with particular interests in the status of international law in U.S. domestic law, international and comparative human rights law, international humanitarian law, and national security.

Cleveland is the Louis Henkin Professor of Human and Constitutional Rights at Columbia Law School.[1] In 2014, she was nominated by the United States and elected to serve a four-year term as an independent expert on the United Nations Human Rights Committee. She was the Co-Coordinating Reporter of the American Law Institute's project on the Restatement (Fourth) of the Foreign Relations Law of the United States, and the U.S. Member on the Venice Commission of the Council of Europe.

Education and judicial clerkships[]

Cleveland was awarded an A.B. with honors at Brown University in 1987 (Junior Phi Beta Kappa); an M.St. from Lincoln College, Oxford University (Rhodes Scholar), in 1989; and a J.D. from Yale Law School in 1992.

Immediately after law school, she clerked for Judge Louis F. Oberdorfer on the United States District Court for the District of Columbia, and then clerked for Supreme Court Justice Harry Blackmun during the 1993-1994 Term.

Notable activities[]

From 2009 to 2011, Cleveland served as the Counselor on International Law to the Legal Adviser at the U.S. Department of State, where she supervised the office's legal work relating to the law of war, counterterrorism, and Afghanistan and Pakistan, and assisted with its international human rights and international justice work. She continues to serve as a member of the Secretary of State's Advisory Committee on International Law. She is a former member of the Executive Council of the American Society of International Law, and a Council Member of the International Bar Association's Human Rights Institute.

A native of Alabama, Cleveland began her legal career as a Skadden Fellow representing migrant farm workers in south Florida. In March 2014, Cleveland was nominated by the U.S. government to serve as an independent expert on the Human Rights Committee, the United Nations treaty body that monitors state implementation of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.[2] The committee holds three month-long meetings each year to review state implementation of the multilateral treaty.[3] The states parties to the multilateral treaty elected her to the committee on June 24, 2014. Her four-year term on the Committee ran for the calendar years 2015-2018.[4]

Cleveland was the U.S. Observer Member to the Venice Commission of the Council of Europe, and is a member of the Secretary of State's Advisory Committee on International Law, and of the American Law Institute.[5][6]

She has been involved in human rights litigation in the United States and before the Inter-American Court of Human Rights. Before joining the Columbia Law School faculty in 2007, she taught at the Harvard, University of Michigan, and University of Texas law schools, and at Oxford University.[7]

She serves on the board of directors of Human Rights First.[8]

Writings[]

Cleveland has written widely on issues of international law, human rights, and U.S. foreign relations law. She is a co-author of Louis Henkin's Human Rights casebook (2nd ed. 2009 and update 2013) and Paul Stephen and Sarah Cleveland, eds., The Restatement and Beyond: The Past, Present, and Future of U.S. Foreign Relations Law (Oxford University Press, 2020). She served on the board of editors of the Journal of International Economic Law and of the International Review of the Red Cross, and still serves on board of editors of the Columbia Journal of Transnational Law.

Personal life[]

Cleveland lives in New York and has two children, Richard and Electa.

See also[]

  • List of law clerks of the Supreme Court of the United States

References[]

  1. ^ Columbia Law School - Faculty bio - Sarah Cleveland
  2. ^ Crosette, Barbara (July 30, 2018). "The UN Eyes a World With Less US". The Nation. Retrieved August 18, 2018.
  3. ^ U.S. Government Nominates Professor Sarah H. Cleveland to U.N. Human Rights Committee - Columbia Law School News
  4. ^ Professor Sarah Cleveland Elected to U.N. Human Rights Committee, Columbia Law School News, June 24, 2014. Accessed August 19, 2018.
  5. ^ The Venice Commission - Individual Members by Country
  6. ^ Cohen, Roger (February 16, 2018). "Opinion: Awaken, Poland, Before It's Too Late". New York Times. Retrieved August 18, 2018.
  7. ^ Bhayani, Paras D.; Zhou, Kevin (December 15, 2006). "Profs Assail Anti-Terror Act". Harvard Crimson. Retrieved August 19, 2018.
  8. ^ "Board of Directors". Human Rights First. Retrieved 2021-04-30.

Selected publications[]

External links[]

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