Three leading researchers from Hungary and the United States have arrived at NUI Galway to begin their three year doctoral studies.
The researchers are part of a €3.7 million European Union Marie Curie Initial Training Network which is being led by the Centre for Disability Law and Policy at NUI Galway.
The PhD students, Magdolna Birtha, Abigail Rekas and Anna Arstein- Kerslake, are members of an international team of 14 researchers who will explore options for European disability law and policy reform in light of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (2006 ). The students will also receive paid placement with leading NGOs such as the European Disability Forum in Brussels.
The Centre for Disability Law & Policy at NUI Galway was awarded the grant to direct the Europe-wide network over the next three years. It is understood this is the single largest EU Framework 7 grant won by a research centre in an Irish Law School. Partners in the network include several leading European universities.
Director of the Centre for Disability Law & Policy at NUI Galway, Professor Gerard Quinn, says: “The object of the network is to create the next generation of disability policy entrepreneurs at European level and to generate research that helps the process of implementation of the disability treaty. We look forward to working with the three new Marie Curie researchers to meet those aims.”