He was later approved for a doctoral dissertation on hereditary law in fourteenth-century Kotor but was required to change his thesis due to the Yugoslav Wars of the 1990s and the resulting inaccessibility of some Montenegrin archives. He ultimately received a Ph.D. in the field of Roman law in 1999. He has published widely on the subject; his book Forum Romanum: Roman State, Law, Religion, and Myth received the Veselin Lučić Endowment Award for best scientific achievement by a University of Belgrade professor in 2005.[1]
Bujuklić became an assistant trainee at the University of Belgrade Faculty of Law in 1978, an assistant in 1985, an assistant professor in 1999, and a full professor in 2014. At one time, Aleksandar Vučić was one of his students.[2] He retired in 2018.[3]
During his assembly term, he was a member of the education committee,[a] the subcommittee on science and higher education, and the committee on constitutional and legislative issues; a deputy member of the committee on Kosovo-Metohija; the leader of Serbia's parliamentary friendship group with the Sovereign Order of Malta; and a member of the friendship group with Italy.[6]
He was not a candidate in the 2023 parliamentary election, and his term ended when the new assembly convened in February 2024.
Notes
^Formally known as the Committee on Education, Science, Technological Development, and the Information Society.