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Lilla Nóra KISS

Editor

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Lilla Nóra Kiss, PhD, is a Senior Policy Analyst for the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation, where her research focuses on international antitrust law, innovation policy, and the regulation of digital platforms. She also serves as an Adjunct Faculty Member at the Global Antitrust Institute of Antonin Scalia Law School, George Mason University. In this role, she teaches Antitrust Law and Consumer Protection Law in the LLM in Global Antitrust Law & Economics program.

Previously, Lilla was a Post-Graduate Visiting Research Fellow in the Hungary Foundation’s Liberty Bridge Program, where she conducted comparative research on how the US and EU regulate social media.

Lilla’s educational credentials include a JD from the University of Miskolc, an LLM in European and International Business Law from Eötvös Loránd University, a PhD in Law and Social Sciences, and an LLM in US Law from George Mason University. Her doctoral thesis on the legal issues of Brexit was successfully defended in 2019, showcasing her expertise in comparative law and EU regulatory frameworks.

Before her research in the United States, Lilla participated in international law programs, such as the Regional Academy on the United Nations (RAUN) and the Academy of European Law (AEL) at the European University Institute in Florence. She also lectured on European Union Law and European and International Business Law in both English and Hungarian for JD and LLM students.

Professionally, Lilla served as a Senior Counselor specializing in EU law at the Hungarian Ministry of Justice, where she provided legal advice on institutional matters between the EU and Member States, contributed to the Future of Europe Conference, and addressed regulatory issues surrounding social media.

A prolific academic, Lilla has authored over 100 scientific publications and presentations. She is a founding editor of the Constitutional Discourse Blog and a founding member of the Freedom and Identity in Central Europe (FICE) working group, promoting greater transatlantic insight and the appreciation of Central Europe’s unique cultural identities and freedoms.

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