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Projects for academic year 2023-2024 announced

Clinic Coordinator

25 Aug 2023

In the year 2023-2024 the Clinic will work with the following projects:


  1. Kenniscentrum Arbeidsmigranten: A research project on fair recruitment standards of labour migrants. This could

    include best practice in other countries, private or public law approaches, questions of enforcement and criminal liability, and could also connect with International Labour Organisation norms and Sustainable Development Goals.


  2. Stichting Straatconsulaat: A project to research the international (UN) and European (EU and Council of Europe) human rights framework on stigmatizing and criminalizing rules and legislation (and application thereof) for people experiencing homelessness and those at risk of homelessness.


  3. International Commission of Jurists: A research to help prepare a mission to evaluate justice, judiciary and human rights in Montenegro, consisting of an overview of the current legal framework and the judicial system in Montenegro, c

    hallenges related to the rule of law / judicial independence stemming from findings of international bodies (eg the Venice Commission) and available stakeholder (especially NGO) reports.

  4. (Under consideration) Public Interest Law Project (PILP): A project involving an inventarisation of international/EU human rights standards related to discrimination in financial and banking sector.

TESTIMONIALS

“In the Radboud University Law Clinic on Human Rights...you get a chance to work on research involving an important societal issue, which will actually be used. You get to work directly with non-for-profit organisations and your work on an end product in a group of students...It is very inspiring to work with your group and with your mentor, and to meet so many people from the field...The Law Clinic was a very useful part of my Master."

Anouk Hol, Student Master Constitutional and Administrative Law (2021-2022)

"The Radboud Law Clinic on Human Rights is not just a normal university course, but also a space dedicated to legal citizenship. The seminars themselves are intellectually stimulating, but also allowed me to develop important practical skills such as expressing myself in front of an audience, working in a team, communicating with different organisations, doing legal research with a precise purpose and more. The supervision and guidance offered were precious in responding to the partner organisation’s needs. "

Raffaela Abbate, Student Master Human Rights and Migration (2021-2022) 

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