A Successful Journey in the Making – Post-Graduate Visiting Research Fellow, Márton Sulyok’s Half-time Summary

by | Feb 13, 2025 | Liberty Bridge Program, News

Márton Sulyok with the Northeastern DC Intensive Group

Márton Sulyok is Hungary Foundation’s Post-Graduate Visiting Research Fellow at the Center for the Constitution at Georgetown University Law Center, based in Washington D.C. since September 2024, as part of the Foundation’s Liberty Bridge Program.

Marton’s research and education activity is centered on many areas of constitutional law and theory surrounding the different issues brought about by the penetration of technological innovation into the field of public law, challenging traditional concepts of constitutional law.

Throughout the first part of his fellowship, he has been part of many professional exchanges with think tanks, educational and students organizations, constitutional law scholars and the like. He has given lectures to the Student Fellows Program of the Georgetown Center for the Constitution and the Law and Policy Doctoral Program of Northeastern University. He also helped organize exchanges with Hungarian academics and students at the Center, and has lead Hungarian academic groups visiting American think tanks and D.C. law schools, engaging in academic and professional discourse.

During the first part of his fellowship, Marton collaboratedwith distinguished experts and scholars, through participating in events like the Federalist Society’s National Lawyers Convention, and various Federalist Society events like the Annual Rupe Debate or the Law in the World of AI conference, the Philadelphia Society’s Annual Meeting, and various programs organized by the Pacific Legal Foundation and the National Civil Liberties Alliance.

 

 

Throughout this period, he has also been published by the prestigious blog of the Federalist Society, enriching Euro-American constitutional discourse.

The Pursuit of Happiness. A Happy Pursuit in Constitution-Making? Constitutional Discourse
A Tale of Two Constitutions: How Comparative Constitutional Law Can Help Us Understand Different Legal Cultures The Federalist Society’s blog

 

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