Anonza Priyadarshini is an intellectually rigorous and socially conscious legal scholar, blending strong academic credentials with a commitment to legal reform. Her diverse body of publications reflects a forward-thinking engagement with contemporary legal challenges, including AI, corruption, and reproductive rights. With extensive moot, research, and judicial experience, Anonza is poised to contribute meaningfully to international human rights law, legal tech policy, or criminal justice reform research initiatives.
and researcher specializing in criminal law, constitutional law,
and emerging technologies in justice. Currently pursuing a PhD
in Law and holding an LLM in Criminal Justice and Security
Laws, she has developed a notable academic portfolio through
publications on AI, privacy, surrogacy, and war crimes. Her
academic excellence has been recognized through
scholarships and fellowships, including a Research Fellowship
from the Ministry of Home Affairs. With hands-on experience in
judicial clerkships, high court internships, and legal aid
advocacy, Anonza combines theoretical insight with practical
understanding making her well-positioned for roles in legal research, human rights, or judicial reform.
− India: Academic research, judicial internships, legal aid, conference participation
− United States of America: Comparative legal study in publications (privacy and surveillance)
− France: Comparative study on predictive policing
− Bhutan: Academic partnership in AI and sustainability law conference
• 2021–Present: India – PhD in Law, qualified UGC-NET
• 2020–2022: India – LLM studies with academic distinction
• 2013–2020: India – Judicial clerkships, legal internships, legal aid advocacy
• Present: Legal writing, research, and conference presentations
AI and the Right to Privacy – IJISEM, 2024
Right to be a Parent and Heteronormative Laws – ILI Law Review, 2022
Combatting Corruption in India’s Corporate Landscape – IJLMH
Rights of a Surrogate Mother… – Prof. S.P. Sathe Conference
(2023) Defense of Insanity and War Crimes – IJLIA
Copyright in Cyberspace – Supremo Amicus