Manohar Sukumar

2011 Extern at Shyam Divan in Delhi
“This summer I had the opportunity to work for Senior Advocate Shyam Divan in New Delhi, India. I was pleasantly surprised by what I learned from my experience. First, India’s legal system bears many remarkable similarities to ours, including a common law basis and the English language. In India, the supreme law of the land is laid down in the world’s longest Constitution, containing 395 articles and 94 amendments. Enacted in 1950, this Constitution had the benefit of hindsight, seeing what worked best around the world, including fundamental rights such as equality before the law, which was incorporated in Article 14 based on the Irish and American Constitutions. The Supreme Court of India is also fascinating in that under the apparent chaos of large crowds of advocates and clients flowing into and out of 14 court rooms, justice emerges, sometimes in stunning activist decisions. As Mr. Divan wisely reiterated many times, the Indian Constitution is young, which is what makes Indian law so exciting, because Constitutional law is still going through a “settling” period. Some may ask, what does a third-world country 8,000 miles away have to do with our country? The answer is that in a world where news travels at the speed of light, American lawyers cannot afford to be ethnocentric because the United States is not always ahead of the curve on global legal sentiment.”
email lclawsa@lclark.edu
voice 503-768-6716
Contact Student Affairs
International Law
Lewis & Clark Law School
10101 S. Terwilliger Boulevard MSC
Portland OR 97219
More Stories

2024 Davis Wright Tremaine International Law Writing Competition Winners Announced
The International Law Writing Award, funded by Davis Wright Tremaine LLP, grants $2,500 and $1,000 stipends for the best and second-best international law research paper written by a Lewis & Clark JD student. This year, Kelsey Chapman-Sutton is the first-place winner and Beth Sethi is the second-place recipient.

Prof. Benjamin Advocates to Establish State Obligations re: Climate Change
Professor Lisa Benjamin co-authored briefs to the International Court of Justice and the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea to establish state obligations around climate change as part of the International Union for the Conservation of Nature. Clinic students supported the effort.

Professor Helps Facilitate Workshop Series with Ukrainian Legal Clinics
Professor Susan Felstiner participates in a groundbreaking US-Ukrainian Clinicians Workshop Series, fostering collaboration and skill-building to empower legal education in Ukraine.

International Law Research Fellow Named
The International Law Committee has selected 3L Kelsey Chapman-Sutton as the International Law Research Fellow for the 2023-24 school year.