Mirjana Todorovska currently is a Lecturer at the Law Faculty at UACS. Todorovska is also a Visiting Scholar at Duke Public Policy Institute, Center for International Development for the academic year 2010/2011. For her research at Duke she won the..
Mirjana Todorovska currently is a Lecturer at the Law Faculty at UACS. Todorovska is also a Visiting Scholar at Duke Public Policy Institute, Center for International Development for the academic year 2010/2011. For her research at Duke she won the World Bank Robert McNamara fellowship.
Todorovska is also a PhD candidate in Development Economics at the Economic Institute, University Ss Cyril and Methodius, Skopje. Since 2003 she has been a lead researcher on IP and technology transfer matters at the Center for Information Society and Intellectual Property, Skopje, Macedonia. (www.cisip.blog.mk).
Her research activities aim towards creating feasible public policy proposals with respect to intellectual property and technology transfer issues, the latter seen as prerequisites for social development of the Western Balkan countries, with particular focus on Macedonia.
Her research is analytical and focused, relying on econometric models that could be tested in practice. It is done through a human development prism relying mainly on the works of Amartya Sen and Muhammad Yunus. Todorovska strives to come up with original and eclectic real life solutions that will take the human development of the Western Balkan countries to a higher level.
In the past she was a Fulbright fellow and a Visiting Scholar at Duke University School of Law conducting research on legal aspects of technology transfer as a factor for economic growth of developing countries, focus on Macedonia.
She already holds an LLM in International Business Law from the Central European University, Budapest, Hungary and an LLM (Magna cum laude) in International Intellectual Property Law from Chicago Kent College of Law, IIT.
Todorovska is a winner of two CALI 2010 awards in International IP Seminar and International Trademark Law.
Less