Discussion with Distinguished Professorial Lecturer in National Security Law Dan Stigall

Wednesday, September 2, 2020 12:05 pm - 7:59 pm

Join the National Security Law Association and the Military Law Society for an engaging discussion with Distinguished Professorial Lecturer in National Security Law Dan Stigall, who will share about his expansive career in national security law and the Army JAG Corps.

About Mr. Stigall

Professor Stigall brings to GW Law a wealth of experience in national security law from the National Security Council, the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), and the Army JAG Corps. Mr. Stigall, who will continue to serve as an attorney at the DOJ, will once again teach a National Security Selected Topics Course: Transnational Security & Cross-Border International Cooperation in Fall 2020, which explores the international and domestic legal frameworks used to combat international terrorism and cross-border crime. Additionally, he again will be teaching Comparative Law in Spring 2021. He is available (by appointment) to discuss national security career goals and courses, as well as to provide guidance regarding resumes.

Mr. Stigall is currently the Deputy Chief of Staff and Counselor for International Affairs for the National Security Division at the DOJ. From 2017–19, he served as a Director for Counterterrorism with the National Security Council, where he focused on detainee policy and served as lead author and interagency coordinator for the U.S. National Strategy for Counterterrorism. He has served in multiple roles in DOJ as both a policy advisor and trial attorney, including several years in DOJ’s Office of International Affairs. In addition, from 2001-09, he served on active duty as a U.S. Army Judge Advocate in Europe, the Middle East, and in the United States. His articles have appeared in the Harvard National Security Journal, the Military Law Review, the Hastings International and Comparative Law Review, and numerous other publications. In addition, he is the author of Counterterrorism and the Comparative Law of Investigative Detention (2009) and The Santillana Codes: The Civil Codes of Tunisia, Morocco, and Mauritania (2017).


Join the Discussion

Google Meet: meet.google.com/uoa-eeix-sea
Call: +1 513-760-6082
Pin: 997 070 910#


Share This Event