LOG IN TO LAWNET
L. Danielle Tully

L. Danielle Tully

Clinical Teaching Fellow

  • Degrees:

  • J.D., Boston College
  • M.A., Tufts University
  • B.A., Brown University
  • Contact:

  • lori.tully@shu.edu
  • Tel:  973.642.8700

Current
Faculty News

Book Signing - "The Life and Times of Richard J. Hughes: The Politics of Civility" by Professor John Wefing, special reading sponsored by the Rodino Law Library, 4-5:30pm

News Archives

Faculty Profile

print

L. Danielle Tully

Clinical Teaching Fellow

Danielle Tully is a Clinical Teaching Fellow in the Civil Rights and Constitutional Litigation Clinic of the Seton Hall Law Center for Social Justice. Her research interests include the interplay of international and domestic law in transitional societies/post conflict settings, judicial capacity development, and the civil and human rights implication of post-9/11 U.S. government policies. While a graduate student at the Fletcher School at Tufts University, Ms. Tully focused on International Human Rights and Conflict Resolution, which grew directly from her undergraduate work in Development Studies at Brown University. While pursuing her graduate degrees, Ms. Tully worked on post-conflict justice issue through a semester-long externship at the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia. In addition, she received a grant from the Owen M. Kupferschmid Holocaust/Human Rights Project to intern in the Office of the Legal Advisor to the Eritrean President in Asmara, Eritrea. This office, staffed by Eritrean and ex-patriot lawyers and law students, is responsible for representing the Eritrean government before the Eritrea-Ethiopia Claims Commission at the Permanent Court of Arbitration. Following law school, Ms. Tully returned to the Office of the Legal Advisor as a contract attorney. She then served as law clerk to Judge D. Brock Hornby of the U.S.District Court for the District of Maine. After her clerkship, she joined the ACLU's National Security Project as a litigation fellow. During her two years at the ACLU, Ms. Tully participated in litigation on range of First, Fourth, Fifth Amendment and statutory challenges to torture, detention, unlawful government surveillance, the reach of material support statutes, abuse of classification and related secrecy measures and other post-9/11 policies. Ms. Tully received her J.D. summa cum laude from Boston College, where she was inducted into the Order of the Coif and served as the solicitations editor for the Boston College International and Comparative Law Review. She also received her Master of Arts in Law and Diplomacy from the Fletcher School at Tufts University. She earned her Bachelor of Arts from Brown University.