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Legal scholar From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Catharine Titi (Greek: Κατερίνα Τιτή, Katerina Titi)[1] is an international lawyer and research associate professor at the Paris-based French National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS).[2][3]
She decided to study law at a young age, when she discovered the legal speeches of Lysias, an ancient Greek orator.[4] Before joining the CNRS, she studied in Greece and London, and then went on to obtain a PhD (summa cum laude) in Germany.[4]
Her work focuses on public international law,[5] and in particular on equity in international law,[6] international investment law,[7][8] and cultural heritage law.[9][10] She co-chairs the Academic Forum on ISDS,[11] she is an expert in the repatriation of cultural property[12] and a member of the Scientific Committee of the UNESCO Chair on Threats to Cultural Heritage.[13] In 2016, she was awarded the Smit-Lowenfeld Prize by the International Arbitration Club of New York (IACNY).[14]
Monographs
Edited books
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