October 28, 2025
Attorney Jessica Flint, of Gevurtz Menashe P.C., has been named a fellow of the International Academy of Family Lawyers (IAFL), according to Managing Shareholder Zachary Fruchtengarten.
IAFL is a worldwide association of practicing lawyers who are recognized by their peers as the most experienced and skilled family law specialists in their respective countries.
“Obviously, we are excited for Jessica to receive this global recognition,” Fruchtengarten said. “We’re also very proud to have her represent Gevurtz Menashe within this incredibly prestigious and influential organization.”
Flint has been a practicing family law attorney in Oregon since 2011, focusing on traditional domestic relations matters as well as complex, cross-border family law disputes. As Of Counsel and Chair of the International Family Law Department at Gevurtz Menashe, she represents clients in highly sensitive and intricate cases that often involve high-asset divorces, international child custody and visitation disputes, relocation, enforcement of foreign orders, and international child abduction matters.
Flint is admitted to practice in both Oregon State and Federal courts. She also routinely resolves matters through alternative dispute resolution, including mediation, arbitration, and judicial settlement conferences. Flint graduated from Willamette University in 2007 and Northwestern School of Law at Lewis & Clark College in 2011 and is Chair of the ABA Family Law Section’s International Law Committee and Liaison for the ABA International Law and Family Law sections. She also provides strategic consulting and expert testimony on international issues for other family law attorneys.
About IAFL
IAFL was formed in 1986 to improve the practice of law and administration of justice in the area of divorce and family law throughout the world. IAFL Fellows are able to provide legal advice to clients and other lawyers on all areas of family law. IAFL supports legislators and lawmakers across the world in the area of law reform, and has received permission to intervene in matters before the highest courts in several jurisdictions including the Supreme Court of the United States, and that of the United Kingdom and the Cour de Cassation in France.