Julie Leftwich appointed Director of International Peace and Security Initiatives
Julie Leftwich has been appointed to the newly created position of director of international peace and security Initiatives at the University of Cincinnati College of Law. In this role, she will lead efforts to establish a Center for International Peace and Security for the College, to serve as a practice-based wing of the renowned Urban Morgan Institute for Human Rights. The new center will work to support global organizations and institutions dedicated to advancing human rights, gender, peace, and security, and to build expertise in the field. It will expand international human rights opportunities for law students to directly support projects for global partners, facilitate policy-based experiences, help facilitate post-graduate employment opportunities with organizations in the fields of peace, security, gender, and human rights, and serve as a hub for scholarship.
“We at the College of Law are extremely excited to have someone of the caliber of Julie Leftwich joining our team, to help develop support for and establish a Center for International Peace and Security,” said UC Law Dean Haider Ala Hamoudi and Nippert Professor of Law. “As conceived, the Center will advance our strategic priorities in the areas of experiential education and international programming, respectively, and it will help further advance the mission of one of our premier centers of excellence—the Urban Morgan Institute. I look forward to working with Julie to do this over the next couple of years.”
“It is with a particular pride that we welcome the creation of the new international peace and security initiative to be directed by our distinguished graduate and former Morgan Fellow Julie Leftwich. Julie draws on a rich experience working with a number of nongovernmental organizations, as well as academic programs,” said Bert Lockwood, Distinguished Service Professor of Law and Director, Urban Morgan Institute for Human Rights. “The project will afford an opportunity to assist the critical work of human rights activists, and to provide additional opportunities for our students to get practical experience. I look forward to working with Julie on these issues that our so important around the globe.”
Working with the next generation of advocates gives me hope for the future.
Julie Leftwich '99
Julie Leftwich
A seasoned international human rights and gender expert, Leftwich brings to the role extensive experience in the areas of women, peace and security, rule of law and access to justice, combating sexual and gender-based violence, refugee and asylum law, democracy and governance, and security sector reform. She is an experienced nonprofit and thought leader, who has worked with organizations globally to build local capacity, strengthen institutions, create legal frameworks and initiatives, build awareness, and share global best practices. She has also worked with national and international agencies to ensure that women’s and gender perspectives are built into diplomatic, development and defense efforts that align with international and U.S. policy.
“I am thrilled to return to my alma mater to build this important initiative,” said Leftwich. “I look forward to collaborating with students, experts, institutions, and civil society to improve gender and human rights focused responses to the peace and security challenges of our times. Working with the next generation of advocates gives me hope for the future.”
The project will afford an opportunity to assist the critical work of human rights activists, and to provide additional opportunities for our students to get practical experience.
Bert Lockwood, Distinguished Service Professor of Law and Director, Urban Morgan Institute for Human Rights
Leftwich has extensive professional experience as an advocate, advisor, trainer, researcher, and writer for the political, justice, security, and civil society sectors. Before joining Cincinnati Law, she founded and served as the executive director of the Immigrant and Refugee Law Center, a non-profit that provides pro bono legal services across a spectrum of humanitarian needs for low-income immigrant and refugee families. Prior to this position, she worked with numerous non-profits and NGOs around the globe to advance gender, peace, and security including the National Democratic Institute for International Affairs (NDI), Freedom House, U.S. Institute of Peace, Women in International Security (WIIS), One Earth Future Foundation/Our Secure Future, George C. Marshall European Center for Security Studies, Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI), National Defense University, International Association of Women Judges, American Association of People with Disabilities, Internews, and the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center.
Additionally, Leftwich has managed programs related to gender justice, women’s rights, and the rule of law in Africa, Asia, the Middle East and North Africa, Eastern Europe and Latin America. This has provided her many opportunities to advise, train, and publish widely on gender, women, peace and security, international human rights law, migration, gender-based violence, and human trafficking, with audiences that have included the judiciary, legal practitioners, law enforcement, the military, government, social workers, and religious and cultural leaders.
Leftwich has held adjunct professor positions at Josef Korbel School of International Studies at the University of Denver, University of Colorado Boulder, and the University of Cincinnati College of Law. Her teaching focuses on women, peace and security, human rights, and refugee and asylum law.
Leftwich holds a bachelor of arts degree from Brandeis University, a master of arts degree in international relations and communications from Universidad Complutense de Madrid, and a juris doctorate degree from the University of Cincinnati College of Law.
We at the College of Law are extremely excited to have someone of the caliber of Julie Leftwich joining our team, to help develop support for and establish a Center for International Peace and Security.
Haider Ala Hamoudi, Dean and Nippert Professor of Law
Latest UC News
- Pianist, educator and scholar Lynn Worcester Jones joins CCM’s facultyUC College-Conservatory of Music Interim Dean Jonathan Kregor has announced the addition of Lynn Worcester Jones, DMA, to the college’s roster of distinguished performing and media arts faculty members. Jones is an innovative pianist, educator, writer, speaker, mentor and leader who encourages career preparation and excellence in students. She begins her new role as Associate Professor of Piano Pedagogy and Coordinator of Group Piano at CCM on Aug. 15, 2024.
- Residents concerned about high concentration of low-income housingEfforts to build more affordable housing in Cincinnati have created concerns for residents as low-income housing has been concentrated in some of the city’s poorest neighborhoods, WCPO reported. Gary Painter, PhD, the academic director of the University of Cincinnati’s Carl H. Lindner College of Business real estate program and a professor of real estate, said a complaint against the city could lead to positive outcomes.
- Is ketamine the answer to treatment-resistant depression?The University of Cincinnati's Stephen Rush joined WVXU's Cincinnati Edition to discuss the use of ketamine and esketamine to treat treatment-resistant depression.
- Scientists craft bold plan to unlock secrets of RNAUC Vice President for Research Patrick Limbach is a key figure in the National Academies’ massive undertaking to sequence RNA in the next 15 years.
- Fellowship aimed at diversifying the nursing workforce celebrates a meaningful milestoneTo help prepare and expand a nursing workforce that is reflective of and responsive to an increasingly diverse patient population, UC College of Nursing launched its Cultivating Undergraduate Nursing Resilience and Equity (CURE) program in the fall of 2021.
- GE Aerospace expands Next Engineers program for Cincinnati youthGE Aerospace Foundation is investing further in its Next Engineers program, including the Cincinnati location facilitated by the University of Cincinnati, extending the program locally through 2028. Engineering Academy, a three-year engineering education program for high-schoolers, graduated its first cohort of students. Students who complete the program and go on to pursue an engineering degree in college will receive a scholarship.