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The Board of Directors of the IHRDC is comprised of human rights advocates and experts, Iranian and non-Iranian.  Several are international lawyers, some are historians and journalists.  The Board members are internationally recognized both for the professional accomplishments and their long-standing commitment to respect for human rights.  They are unpaid for their contribution to the IHRDC.  The Board members are:
 

  • Owen M. Fiss, B.A, B. Phil, LL.B. (Sterling Professor, Yale University School of Law)

Chairman of the Board of Directors
Owen Fiss was admitted to the New York bar in 1965, and has been a professor at Yale Law School since 1974. His areas of interest are procedure, the US Supreme Court, free speech, equality, distributive justice, legal theory, remedies, law and development and comparative constitutional law. Professor Fiss is author of numerous publications including most recently: The Law as It Could Be (2003), A Way Out: America's Ghettos and the Legacy of Racism (2003), and A Community of Equals (1999).
 

  • Roya Hakakian, MSW

Secretary of the Board of Directors
Roya Hakakian is the author of two highly acclaimed collections of poetry, and writes for numerous publications, including the Washington Post, and the Weekly Forward. She is a term member at the Council on Foreign Relations. Ms. Hakakian's memoir of growing up a Jewish teenager in post-revolutionary Iran, Journey from the Land of No (Crown) was Elle Magazine's Best Nonfiction Book of 2004.
 

  • Adriana Odice, B.S., CPA (Chief Operating Officer of Business Management Resources Group)

Chair of the Finance Committee
Adriana Odice is the Chief Operating Officer of Business Management Resource Group, LLC in Danbury, Connecticut, a company that provides outsourced CFO, controller and bookkeeping services for small to mid-sized firms both on-site and remotely. She is a CPA, registered in the state of Connecticut and has more than 15 years experience in financial planning and budget work process analysis and financial accounting software applications training and development
 

  • Ramin Ahmadi, MD, MPH (Clinical Professor of Medicine, Yale University School of Medicine)

Dr. Ahmadi is associate clinical professor of medicine at the Yale School of Medicine, and the founder of Griffin Center for Health and Human Rights. He represented Physicians for Human Rights in Chechnya where he investigated and documented human rights violations. He has also participated in human rights and public health projects in East Timor, Nicaragua, Uganda, Sri Lanka and Guyana. Dr. Ahmadi is the author of two books of poetry, numerous articles and short stories in Persian and English. He has also published a book on Abbas Amir-Entezam, Iran's longest-held prisoner of conscience.
 

  • Payam Akhavan, LL.B., LL.M, S.J.D. (Professor, McGill University Faculty of Law)

Payam Akhavan is Professor of International Law at McGill University in Montreal, Canada. He earned his Doctorate from Harvard Law School and was previously Senior Fellow at Yale Law School and Distinguished Visiting Professor at University of Toronto. He is the author of numerous publications and his 2001 article "Beyond Impunity" in the American Journal of International Law has been recognized as one of “the most significant published journal essays in contemporary legal studies.”

Professor Akhavan was the first United Nations war crimes prosecutor at The Hague, and played a key role in the trial of Yugoslav leaders such as President Milosevic. He also served with the UN in Bosnia, Cambodia, Guatemala, East Timor, and Rwanda, and has been appointed as legal counsel in leading cases before the International Court of Justice, the International Criminal Court, and the European Court of Human Rights.

Professor Akhavan has been a prominent advocate of human rights for Iranian political prisoners, is Co-Founder of the Iran Human Rights Documentation Centre, and has been at the forefront of efforts to bring Iranian leaders to justice for crimes against humanity. He has been appointed by the Government of Canada as a Director of the International Centre for Rights & Democracy, recognized by the World Economic Forum as a Young Global Leader, and his work has been featured in the New York Times, Maclean's magazine, and other media.
 

  • Roya Boroumand, PhD (Executive Director, Abdorrahman Boroumand Foundation)

Dr. Boroumand is an independent historian specializing in Iran's contemporary history. She is the co-founder of the Abdorrahman Boroumand Foundation for the Promotion of Human Rights and Democracy in Iran. She has worked as a consultant for the Women's Rights Division of Human Rights Watch on discrimination in Moroccan family law and violence against women in Algeria. She has also researched discrimination against women and children in Iran's penal and family code. Her current focus is on a human rights education project for Iran.
 

  • Laura Dickinson, B.A., J.D (Foundation Professor, Sandra Day O’Conner College of Law, Arizona State University)

Laura Dickinson is Foundation Professor at the Sandra Day O’Conner College of Law at Arizona State University. Prior to her appointment, she was Professor of Law at the University of Connecticut School of Law from 2001-2008. Professor Dickinson is a graduate of Harvard University and Yale Law School. She served as judicial law clerk to Judge Dorothy Nelson of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, and Justices Harry Blackmun and Stephen G. Breyer of the U.S. Supreme Court. She has also served as an appellate litigation fellow at the Georgetown University Law Center. Before joining the University of Connecticut faculty, she served as Senior Policy Advisor to Harold Hongju Koh, former Assistant Secretary of State for Democracy, Human Rights and Labor.
 

  • Lawrence Douglas, A.B, M.A, J.D. (Professor of Law, Jurisprudence and Social Thought, Amherst University)

Lawrence Douglas is the James J. Grosfeld Professor of Law, Jurisprudence & Social Thought, at Amherst College.  He holds degrees from Brown (A.B.), Columbia (M.A.), and Yale Law School (J.D.). He is the author of three books: The Memory of Judgment: Making Law and History in the Trials of the Holocaust (Yale University Press, 2001), a widely acclaimed study of war crimes trials; Sense and Nonsensibility (Simon and Schuster, 2004), a parodic look at contemporary culture co-authored with Alexander George; and The Catastrophist (Other Press, 2006; Harcourt, 2007), a novel. He has co-edited eight books on the law published by Stanford University Press. His articles have appeared in numerous journals and magazines including The Yale Law Journal, The Washington Post, and The Los Angeles Times. He is regular contributor to the Chronicle of Higher Education and The Times Literary Supplement.  He is currently at work on a book on the cultural afterlife of war crimes trials to be published by Princeton University Press.
 

  • Jonathan M. Freiman, B.A, J.D. (Partner, Wiggin and Dana)

Jonathan M. Freiman is a partner at Wiggin & Dana, LLP, where he litigates appellate matters and complex cases, including transnational disputes. He founded the National Litigation Project (NLP) of the Allard K. Lowenstein Clinic at Yale Law School in 2002 with Dean Harold H. Koh and directed its work in post-9/11 cases for several years. He has served as a lecturer at Yale and as a Senior Fellow in its Orville H. Schell, Jr. Center for Human Rights. Jonathan has been selected for inclusion in the last six editions of The Best Lawyers in America for his work as an appellate lawyer, has recently been selected for inclusion in SuperLawyers, has received the Advocacy of the Law Award from the Connecticut Law Tribune, was the second lawyer ever to receive the McQuillan Public Service Award from the Connecticut Criminal Defense Lawyers’ Association, and has received awards from the Florida Supreme Court and the Cuban-American Bar Association. In addition to print and broadcast commentary, Jonathan has spoken on legal issues in Europe, Canada and the United States, at venues including the Federalist Society and a United Nations Expert Roundtable. He earned his J.D. in 1998 from Yale Law School.
 

  • Elizabeth T. Gray, Jr., B.A., J.D.

Elizabeth T. Gray, a consultant, poet, translator, and independent scholar, is a graduate of Radcliffe College and Harvard Law School. With Professor Roger Fisher, Director of the Harvard Negotiation Project and co-author of Getting to YES, she co-founded Conflict Management, Inc. and Conflict Management Group, small consulting firms that focused on the process by which individuals and organizations manage complex negotiations. Her global practice specialty was the formation and management of complex inter-corporate alliances. She also served as CEO and Managing Partner of Alliance Management Partners from 1999 until 2004. She has lived and traveled widely in the Middle East and South Asia, studied Urdu and Persian at Harvard, and was a research associate at the University of Isfahan, Iran, in 1975-1976. Her translations of Iran’s major mystic lyric poet, Hafiz-i Shirazi (d. 1389) were published by White Cloud Press in 1995, and have been performed at the Sackler Museum in Washington, D. C. and other venues.
 

  • Andrea Christie Pizziconi, B.A.

Andrea Christie Pizziconi is a graduate of Yale and the former Manager of Retail Development for Yale University Properties. In the fall of 2003, Ms Pizziconi was selected as one of 42 Gates Scholars to study at the University of Cambridge in the UK where she conducted independent research on the benefits of locating urban public schools in central business districts. Ms Pizziconi was recruited by the Grosvenor Group Holding Company to work to create a US development strategy in the Washington, DC and San Francisco markets. Ms Pizziconi returned to the US in 2004 to found The Christie Wareck Company. In 2005, Pizziconi was selected by Business New Haven to receive their "Rising Star" award for her work on the Johnson Simons project. Pizziconi is a CFA charterholder and a member of the Urban Land Institute.
 

  • John G. Simon, B.A., LL.B. (Augustus E. Lines Professor Emeritus of Law and Professorial Lecturer in Law, Yale University School of Law)

John Simon has taught at Yale Law School since 1962. During his time at Yale, he has served as both Deputy Dean (1985-1990) and Acting Dean (1991). From 1953 to 1958 Professor Simon served in both military and civilian posts as assistant to the General Counsel, Office of the Secretary of the Army and practiced law in the state of New York. He is a specialist on the nonprofit sector and philanthropy along with elementary and secondary education. From 1977 to 1982 Professor Simon served as the founding Director of the Yale Program on Nonprofit Organizations. His publications include The Ethical Investor: Universities and Corporate Responsibility (with Jon Gunnemann and Charles Powers).
 

  • Fredrick J. Streets, MDiv., MSW, Ph. D.

The Reverend Frederick J. Streets was Chaplain of Yale University and Senior Pastor of the Church of Christ in Yale for 15 years. He currently teaches at both Yale Divinity School and Yeshiva University. Reverend Streets has done humanitarian work and promoted peacemaking in the United States and internationally including West Africa, South Africa, Israel, Bosnia, Colombia, South America, Cuba and Argentina. Reverend Streets is a senior consultant with the Harvard University Program in Refugee Trauma.
 
 

 

 


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