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Emilie has graduated in civil law from the University of Quebec in Montreal, where she also has completed a bachelors in International Relations and International Law, which sparked her interest in law. While pursuing her first bachelors, she attended a semester in Buenos Aires, Argentina, and participated in the Charles Rousseau moot court competition in International Public Law, which central theme was the right of public markets before the World Trade Organization. During her law studies, she was intern for the Honourable Judge Rochon, J.C.A., and assumed the role of Redactor in Chief Associated at the Revue Québécoise de Droit International (RQDI). In May 2009, she obtained the Brian Tittemore fellowship, which led her to work for ten months in the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (OAS), in Washington D.C. Emilie loves to travel, which she did a lot in South America; she also likes to read, write, read the news papers with a good cup of café au lait, horse back riding, and do outdoor sports. Had she not pursued a career in law, Emilie would probably be a foreign correspondent, an actress, the owner and chef of a small French bistro, a writer –or all of the previous.. |