Prof. (Dr.) Kishore is Professor and Assistant Director, Centre for International Trade and Economic Laws. Prof. Kishore studied at the Centre d’Etudes et de Recherches Internationales et Communautaires (CERIC) of the Université Paul Cézanne d’Aix-Marseille III, France, where she earned a doctorate in International Trade Law and a MPhil in Public International Law. She also holds a Master in European Business Law from the same university. She was twice awarded the prestigious Gustave Eiffel Excellence Scholarship by the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
Additionally, she has been a recipient of a number of awards as well as full scholarships and fellowships from various national and international organisations/entities including the United Nations, the European Union, and the Government of France, among others. In India, she obtained a Bachelor of Laws from the Campus Law Centre and a Bachelor of Commerce (Honours) from Sri Ram College of Commerce of the University of Delhi.
She teaches courses on International Trade Law and related subjects. Additionally, she is Visiting Professor at Université Pantheon-Assas Paris II, France’s top law school, where she teaches law courses in French. Previously, she was Research Fellow at the World Trade Organization, Geneva. She has also worked with the Centre de Sciences Humaines and the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees.
Prof. Kishore is a member of various international research projects and programmes such as Global Justice/Injustice, Reconsidering European Contributions to Global Justice (GLOBUS), and New Silk Road. China’s Belt and Road Initiative in Context, among others. She has co-edited an issue of the Jindal Global Law Review, has been on its Editorial Board, and has been a referee for a number of journals. Additionally, she has participated in and attended conferences in India and overseas, and has been a resource person in international capacity building programmes.
She has varied interests such as European Law, Comparative Law, Continental Law, and Public International Law. Her main interest lies in Trade and Development. She has written and published extensively in English and French not only in International Trade Law but also in other areas of Public International Law and Comparative Law such as human cloning, comfort women, territorial disputes, nuclear weapons, environmental law, and consumer protection.
Prof. Kishore is fluent in Hindi, English, and French (in which she wrote her PhD and MPhil dissertations) and has basic/beginner’s knowledge of another nine Asian and European languages. She is also trained to teach French as a foreign language. She also practices different types of visual arts which she has exhibited nationally and internationally.
Edited Volumes
Co-Editor of Jindal Global Law Review (Volume 5, Issue 1, April 2014) on the theme Horizontal Learning: Brazil and India in BRICS
Articles
Dissolving the Dichotomies Between Online and Campus‑Based Teaching: a Collective Response to The Manifesto for Teaching Online (Bayne et al. 2020), Postdigital Science and Education (co-author in collective article)
Revisiting the Advisory Opinion on the Legality of the Threat or Use of Nuclear Weapons a Quarter Century Later, XVI Bhutan Law Review, November 2021, pp. 49-71
Teaching in the Age of Covid-19 – 1 Year Later, 3(3) Postdigital Science and Education, October 2021, pp. 1073-1223 (co-author in collective article)
Teaching in the Age of Covid-19, 2(3) Postdigital Science and Education, October 2020, pp. 1069-1230 (co-author in collective article)
The Role of Consumer Protection in the Relations between Asia and the European Union, 14(11 and 12) Global Trade and Customs Journal, 2019, pp. 537-552
India’s Experience with the WTO Agreement on Textiles and Clothing, 13(3) Global Trade and Customs Journal, 2018, pp. 95-106
Using the Unprecedented Nuclear Weapons Advisory Opinion as Precedent in the Marshall Islands Cases, 5(1) Kathmandu School of Law Review, April 2017, pp. 136-152
A Critical Analysis of Conditionalities in the Generalised System of Preferences, 54 Canadian Yearbook of International Law, 2016, pp. 98-133
La réglementation du clonage humain, 4 Revue de droit international et de droit comparé, 2015, pp. 497-524
India’s Experience with the Anti-dumping Mechanism, 4 International Business Law Journal, 2014, pp. 317-329
Special and Differential Treatment in the Multilateral Trading System, 13(2) Chinese Journal of International Law, June 2014, pp. 363-394
Editors’ Introduction Managing Growth in a Changing World: What Lessons Can the BRICS Learn from Each Other? 5(1) Jindal Global Law Review, April 2014, pp. 1-8 (co-author)
Le tribunal international de Tokyo pour les crimes de guerre commis sur des femmes : jugement de l’esclavage sexuel organisé par l’armée japonaise, 66(2) Revue hellénique de droit international, 2013, pp. 447-460
A Development Reading of India’s Cases in the World Trade Organization, V Indian Journal of International Economic Law, 2012, pp. 1-22
Le Cachemire : Peuple sans Etat ?, 53(2) Les Cahiers de droit, June 2012, pp. 383-416
Revisiting the WTO Shrimps Case in the Light of Current Climate Protectionism: A Developing Country Perspective, 3(1) The George Washington Journal of Energy & Environmental Law, January/Winter 2012, pp. 78-90
A Comparative Analysis of Secretariats created under Select Treaty Regimes, 45(4) The International Lawyer, Winter 2011, pp. 1051-1082
Conditionalities in the Generalized System of Preferences as Instruments of Global Economic Governance, 45(3) The International Lawyer, Fall 2011, pp. 895-902
Are Trade-related Climate Protection Laws Compatible with the Law of the World Trade Organization?, 4 International Energy Law Review, 2011, pp. 160-165
Women’s Human Rights Violations: Female Sexual Slavery during the Second World War, 2(2) ProWA Bulletin, July – December 2010, pp. 5-6
A Critical Analysis of the WTO DSS in the Light of India’s Cases, Sixth International Conference on International Law in the Contemporary World Conference Proceedings, Indian Society of International Law, 2009, pp. 359-374