She graduated law at the Faculty of Law and Political Sciences at Pázmány Péter Catholic University in 2025, with summa cum laude honors. Her thesis examined the relationship between the selection methods of the members of constitutional courts and the independence of the constitutional adjudicative bodies. During her university years, she was an active participant in the work of the PPKE JÁK Scientific Student Association of Public Law. In addition to her studies, she was a student at the School of Social and History of Mathias Corvinus Collegium, and later participated in postgradual programmes as well. She is a Deák Ferenc Alumna of the Ministry of Justice of Hungary.
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Legal Intern, Ministry of Justice of Hungary, Department of Public Services Codification,
Legal Intern at Dr. Gresz Orsolya Attorney at Law
Legal Studies, Pázmány Péter Catholic University, Faculty of Law and Political Sciences
Scholarships/grants:
Deák Ferenc Scholarship, Ministry of Justice of Hungary
Constitutional engineering: let’s design the perfect political system!
Which is the best political system? The course attempts to answer this question - with the active participation of the students. The aim of the course is to enable students to argue for (and against) their preferred combination and type of political institutions. To this end, students will be asked to design an ideal political system within an imaginary constitutional process, expressing their views on how the system should be changed and justice established, or even on the nature of the constitutional process. In response to the arguments of others, students formulate their views on the political system they think is best.
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