
Choudhury,
Senn to join law school faculty in fall
CHARLESTON, S.C., July 27, 2006 - - Professors Barnali
Choudhury and Craig R.
Senn will join the Charleston School of Law faculty in
the fall as assistant professors, Dean Richard Gershon announced
today.
Choudhury to teach international law

Choudhury
|
Choudhury, who recently has served as a research consultant with
the World Trade Institute in Bern, Switzerland, will join the
Charleston School of Law in the fall as an international law professor,
Gershon said.
"The law school is indeed lucky to have Professor Choudhury
to join its faculty," he said. "Her international experience
in coordinating and conducting research between international
trade and human rights will extend the breadth of the law school
tremendously. We look forward to having her in Charleston this
fall."
Choudhury, who received her master's of law degree at Columbia
University School of Law and a bachelor's in law at Queen's University
in Kingston, Canada, has been a practicing attorney since 2002.
She also has a bachelor's in commerce from McMaster University
in Hamilton, Canada. At Columbia, Choudhury was the Harlan Fiske
Stone Scholar and LL.M. staff editor of the Columbia Journal of
Transnational Law.
Prior to her work in Bern, she was an associate at law firms
in Toronto, Canada, where she practiced corporate and insolvency
litigation, international trade law, investment law and general
commercial litigation. During this period in 2004, she also served
as a law clerk to the ICC International Court of Arbitration in
Paris, France.
Widely published in legal journals, Choudhury brings a variety
of teaching experiences to Charleston, where she will teach international
law, international business transactions and torts. She has been
a guest lecturer at the Europe Institute at the University of
Basel, a lecturer at the University of Otago in Dunedin, New Zealand,
and a teaching assistant at Queen's University in Canada.
Senn, highly-rated at Loyola, to teach contracts

Senn
|
Senn will teach contracts at Charleston School of Law in the
coming academic year, Gershon said.
"We're fortunate to have Professor Senn to join us as a
full-time faculty member from Loyola University School of Law
in New Orleans, where he was rated by students for his overall
effectiveness in the classroom," the dean said. "Our
students will greatly benefit from his style of teaching and we
welcome him to the area."
Senn received his law degree with honors from the University
of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Law and a bachelor's
degree from the University of Georgia, where he graduated first
in his class. At Chapel Hill, he served as articles editor of
the North Carolina Journal of International Law and Commercial
Regulation.
At Loyola, Senn served as a Westerfield Fellow and taught contracts,
Moot Court, and legal research and writing. He recently published
an article about federal employment claims in the Florida Law
Review.
Prior to entering academia, Senn practiced as a labor and employment
lawyer and litigator in Atlanta for more than nine years. For
six years, he spearheaded the Atlanta employment practice of Womble,
Carlyle, Sandridge and Rice, PLLC.
In 2003, Senn received the Founder's Award from the Thurgood
Marshall Scholarship Fund for his pro bono service to the Fund.