Miami University
 
 
 
 
 
  Dr. Muna Ndulo is a distinguished scholar with academic accomplishments from Harvard University and Oxford University (England). He graduated from the University of Zambia with LL.B., in 1970; from Harvard Law School with LL.M., in 1971; and from Trinity College, University of Oxford (England) with D. Phil in 1977. He is currently a professor of law
at Cornell Law School, and the Director of the Cornell University’s Institute for African Development. Dr Ndulo started his legal career as a public prosecutor in Zambia. Dr. Ndulo was a professor at the University of Zambia and a dean for half a decade. He started teaching at the Cornell Law School in 1984 as a visiting professor. He has lectured at several academic institutions including: the International Development Law Institute (IDLI) in Rome, University of Graz, in Austria, and Bayreauth University in Germany. He has acted as a consultant to the World Bank; International Labor Organization (ILO); and Economic Commission for Africa (ECA).
Between 1986 and 1996, Dr Ndulo served as Legal Officer with the United
Nations Commissions on International Trade Law (UNCITRAL), in Vienna,
Austria. He served as Principal Political Advisor (1992-1994) to Lakdar Brahimi, who was then Special Representative of the UN Secretary-General, to South Africa, and currently UN Envoy in Iraq. Dr. Ndulo also served as Legal Advisor to the United Nations Missions in East Timor (1999), and Kosovo (2000). Last summer, he served as Legal Expert to the
International Foundation for Electoral Systems (IFES) and was in that capacity seconded to Afghanistan to work with the Transitional Government’s Ministry of Justice and the United Nations Mission to Afghanistan on election issues. As a Legal Expert, he played an instrumental role in designing and writing the law which guided East Timor’s referendum in 1999. He was also instrumental last year (2003) in helping the Ministry of Justice in Afghanistan draft the law to guide the elections for Afghanistan scheduled for November 2004. He serves on the Advisory Committee of Human Rights Watch (Africa) Division.


Dr. Ndulo’s scholarship focuses on legal aspects of foreign investments, international organizations and international human rights institutions, common law and African legal systems, and designing constitutions for post conflict societies. He is a prolific writer with eight (8) books, eighty three (83) articles, thirty nine (39) seminar and conference presentations, and over fifty (50) newspaper and magazine articles.

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