Anna Dolidze


Anna Dolidze is a Georgian attorney, professor of international law at the University of Western Ontario and government official. A speaker and writer on international law and human rights in Caucasus and Central Eurasia, she was appointed as the chief legal adviser to the President of Georgia on 27 June 2016. On 8 January 2018 the President of Georgia appointed Dolidze to the High Council of Justice, the body that oversees the judiciary.

Career

Born in Tbilisi, Dolidze graduated from the Tbilisi State University with a degree in law summa cum laude in 2002. In 2004 Dolidze received master's degree in International Law from Leiden University. In 2004–2006 Dolidze was the President of the Georgian Young Lawyers' Association, the leading human rights organization in Georgia. Dolidze targeted legal reform, advocated for government transparency, accountability, and criminal justice reform. Dolidze represented in court the victims of human rights abuses, including journalist Irakli Imnaishvili, "rebel judges", Anna Dolidze was a leader of the social movement to punish murderers of Sandro Girgvliani.
She served on boards of a number of important organizations in Georgia, such as the Georgia Media Council, the Stakeholders Committee of the Millennium Challenge Corporation in Georgia, the Human Rights Monitoring Council of the Penitentiary and Detention Places, and the National Commission against Trafficking in Persons.
In 2012 Dolidze testified before the US Congress. In 2013 Dolidze received a JSD from Cornell Law School and was appointed Assistant Professor of Law at the University of Western Ontario. Dolidze was appointed as a Deputy Minister of Defense on 15 May 2015. In February 2016, she was nominated to a vacant seat on the Supreme Court of Georgia, replacing Levan Murusidze.

Public appearances

Dolidze frequently appears on media to comment about the issues of law, justice, and human rights
Dolidze has been quoted in the Wall Street Journal, the Washington Post, and in dozens of legal publications, on radio and television on issues related to Georgia and the former Soviet Union. She is a frequent speaker at conferences and panels worldwide.