<span class="vcard">Josh Asabor</span>

Josh Asabor

Student Staff Editor

Josh is a Notes and Comments Editor for Yale’s Law and Policy Review and engages in public-interest litigation as part of the San Francisco Affirmative Litigation Project. He is also a speechwriter for Dean Gerken, a research assistant for Professors Ooona Hathaway and Issa Kohler-Hausmann, a co-chair on YLS’s Title IX Working Group and Parliamentarian of Yale’s Black Law Students Association. This past summer, Josh worked as an intern with the ACLU’s Voting Rights Project.

Prior to law school, Josh spent several years in consulting and private equity. As an undergraduate at Princeton, Josh studied military history and engaged in independent scholarship focused on an interdisciplinary approach to studying conflict and warfare around the world.

Josh is interested in the intersection of national security and racial justice, U.S. human rights / humanitarian rights policy, cybersecurity and elections, populism, and comparative analysis of U.S. and Nigerian protest movements.

Articles by this author:

Security Council members hold a videoconference to announce the outcome of the votes in connection with Libya and Libya sanctions.
Security Council members hold a videoconference in connection with Maintenance of international peace and security.
A person with a face mask walks past a television screen at Suseo railway station in Seoul on March 26, 2021, showing news footage of North Korea's latest tactical guided projectile test.
People pay tribute by laying flowers and lighting candles next to dried blood at the spot where Chit Min Thu, 25, was killed in clashes on March 11, 2021 in Yangon, Myanmar. Bricks are laid among the flowers and a few people wear or carry hard hats. Everyone wears face maks.
Myanmar's Ambassador to the United Nations Kyaw Moe Tun raises a hand and addresses the General Assembly on Feb 26, 2021.
A circle chart shows the Senate’s votes during Trump’s second impeachment. 57% convict; 13% critical of Trump on merits, but did not convict; 19% neutral on Trump on merits and did not convict; and 11% support Trump on merits and did not convict.

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