Hannah L. Buxbaum

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Hannah L. Buxbaum (born 1966) is vice president for international affairs at Indiana University. She is a professor at the Indiana University Maurer School of Law in Bloomington, Indiana, where she holds the John E. Schiller Chair in Legal Ethics. She was appointed vice president for international affairs in 2018. [1] From 2015-2018, she served as the inaugural academic director of the IU Europe Gateway in Berlin.

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Buxbaum graduated cum laude from Cornell University in 1987 and earned a J.D. magna cum laude from its law school in 1992. She also received an LL.M summa cum laude from the University of Heidelberg in 1993. [2] She joined the law school faculty in 1997 after practicing in the area of international securities transactions in the New York and Frankfurt offices of Davis Polk & Wardwell. From January 2012 through December 2013, she served as the law school's interim dean. She teaches and writes in the area of private international law and international litigation and jurisdiction. [2]

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References

  1. Staff, Inside INdiana Business. "IU Announces Next International Affairs VP" . Retrieved 2018-08-01.{{cite news}}: |first= has generic name (help)
  2. 1 2 Buxbaum, Hannah. "Indiana University Maurer School of Law" . Retrieved 10 January 2018.
  3. Buxbaum, Hannah L. (2017). "Determining the Territorial Scope of State Law in Interstate and International Conflicts: Comments on the Draft Restatement (Third) and on the Role of Party Autonomy". Duke Journal of Comparative & International Law. 27: 381 via indiana.edu.
  4. Buxbaum, Hannah L. (2017). "Transnational Legal Ordering and Regulatory Conflict: Lessons From the Regulation of Cross-Border Derivatives". UC Irvine Journal of International, Transnational, and Comparative Law. 1: 91 via indiana.edu.
  5. Buxbaum, Hannah L. (2016). "Foreign Governments as Plaintiffs in U.S. Courts and the Case Against "Judicial Imperialism"". Washington & Lee Law Review. 73: 653 via indiana.edu.
  6. Buxbaum, Hannah L. (2015). "The Viability of Enterprise Jurisdiction: A Case Study of the Big Four Accounting Firms". U.C. Davis Law Review. 48: 1769 via indiana.edu.