Conor O’Mahony is a senior lecturer at the School of Law at University College Cork, where he has lectured since 2005... moreConor O’Mahony is a senior lecturer at the School of Law at University College Cork, where he has lectured since 2005. His research interests lie broadly in the areas of constitutional law and children's rights, with a particular focus on constitutional interpretation, child protection, family rights, education rights and religious freedom. He is the author of Educational Rights in Irish Law (Thomson Round Hall, 2006) and has published numerous articles in such journals as the International Journal of Constitutional Law, Public Law, the Harvard Human Rights Journal, the Child and Family Law Quarterly, the International Journal of Law, Policy and the Family and the Journal of Social Welfare and Family Law. He is the Deputy Director of the Child Law Clinic at UCC, which works to support litigation and advocate for law reform in the area of children's rights (including the case of O'Keeffe v Ireland, ECtHR 2014). He is co-PI on IDEA: Improving Decisions for children through Empowerment and Advocacy, a two year, five country, €500,000 project co-funded by the Rights, Equality and Citizenship programme of the European Union.(Conor O’Mahony is a senior lecturer at the School of Law at University College Cork, where he has lectured since 2005. His research interests lie broadly in the areas of constitutional law and children's rights, with a particular focus on constitutional interpretation, child protection, family rights, education rights and religious freedom. He is the author of Educational Rights in Irish Law (Thomson Round Hall, 2006) and has published numerous articles in such journals as the International Journal of Constitutional Law, Public Law, the Harvard Human Rights Journal, the Child and Family Law Quarterly, the International Journal of Law, Policy and the Family and the Journal of Social Welfare and Family Law. He is the Deputy Director of the Child Law Clinic at UCC, which works to support litigation and advocate for law reform in the area of children's rights (including the case of O'Keeffe v Ireland, ECtHR 2014). He is co-PI on IDEA: Improving Decisions for children through Empowerment and Advocacy, a two year, five country, €500,000 project co-funded by the Rights, Equality and Citizenship programme of the European Union.)
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