The European Union and how learning comes into play amongst these many adventures
Since taking a course on international organizations in undergrad, I've been fascinated by international cooperation and conflict. What makes states decide to work together, and what makes them fight tooth and nail for centuries on end? From a political science perspective, from a historian's perspective and from a legal perspective, there are dramatically different answers to these questions. In the case of the EU, cooperation is mostly economic. It was incredible to see at the European Court of Justice a case tried over an issue that was decided decades ago in the United States. In many ways, European Union law is just a much much more complex version of our federal law. This semester I am taking a course called European Union law, so it was interesting to visit these places as a way of bringing words in a textbook to life. Although these institutions are open to the public, we had special treatment by getting speakers and guided tours.
See if you can guess what all these ingredients lead to. Take 40 law school students to a beer capital of the world, then drag those 40 hungover students to a court room at 8 am, toss 'em in the room with little headsets to translate from German that is not simultaneously translated into English for the first 30 minutes and what do you have?? 40 sleeping law students? You guessed it. We didn't exactly represent our University in the finest light that day, but it wasn't entirely due to apathy.
Luxembourg, country number 28 for me and for London, country number30
having a chocolate covered strawberry in front of the original Godiva. DELICIMOSO.
I think this is funny! I may not pass this one on to the church :)
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