About
What We Do

Using a comparative lens, we work within the major legal systems of the world – including civil code, common law, and Islamic, Asian, customary, and indigenous legal systems – and build strategies that span a broad legal spectrum. This approach supports sustainable organic peacebuilding efforts that take root locally and are based upon objective, comparative options.
Who We are
Students: Our students work in a variety of ways to further the goals of CLS.
Comparative Legal Student Scholars: Comparative Legal Studies Scholars (CLSS) is the student division of William & Mary Law School’s Center for Comparative Legal Studies and Post-Conflict Peacebuilding (CLS/PCP). It is dedicated to offering law students a wide range of academic and real-world professional experiences in the field of post-conflict peacebuilding.
International Public Service Internships: Each Summer we send approximately 25 law students who have been thoroughly trained in comparative legal strategies into the field to work in Rule of Law and peacekeeping projects.
Faculty: Faculty members regularly provide advice and research to officials, policy advisors, tribunals, and organizations in developing and post-conflict countries while also producing cutting-edge scholarship on emerging topics of international importance.
Graduates: Our graduates work around the world using the education and training they receive at William & Mary to meet the pressing global challenges facing their generation. Our grads work for the United Nations, the U.S. Departments of State and Commerce, international law firms and a variety of international public and private organizations.

Partners: We maintain collaborative working relationships with prestigious institutions around the world – our partners include: the United States Institute of Peace; the National Center for State Courts, the International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance; the Centre for Political and Constitutional Studies within the Ministry of the Presidency of Spain; the Fondation pour le Droit Continental in France, and the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy