Carsten Stahn is Professor of International Criminal Law and Global Justice at Leiden University and Program Director of the Grotius Centre. He is the author of The Law and Practice of International Territorial Administration: Versailles to Iraq and Beyond. He has published articles on international criminal law and transitional justice in leading international journals (American Journal of International Law, European Journal of International Law, Journal of International Criminal Justice, Harvard International Law Journal), and edited several collections of essays in the field.
Jennifer Easterday is a Researcher for the 'Jus Post Bellum' project. She is also an international justice consultant and a Trial Monitor for the Open Society Justice Initiative. She previously worked for International Criminal Law Services, an NGO based in The Hague, on a variety of international criminal law capacity-building projects in domestic jurisdictions in the former Yugoslavia and Africa. She has also worked as a Senior Researcher and Trial Monitor for the UC Berkeley War Crimes Studies Center, researching and monitoring the Special Court for Sierra Leone trial of Charles Taylor. She has experience at the ICTY and with other international criminal law and human rights NGOs in the United States and Latin America. She received her Juris Doctor from the University of California, Berkeley School of Law and is a member of the California State Bar.
Jens Iverson is a Researcher for the 'Jus Post Bellum' project and an attorney specializing in public international law. A member of the California Bar, the Thurston Society, and the Order of the Coif, he received his Juris Doctor cum laude from the University of California, Hastings, and his Bachelor of Arts from Yale University. He has worked with the Cambodian Genocide Program, the Documentation Centre of Cambodia, and the Coalition for the International Criminal Court. As the co-founder of a human rights clinic, he helped represent the former Prime Minister of Haiti in a successful petition to the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights that ultimately resulted in a landmark ruling requiring Haitian prison reform. He has practiced at the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia on both the Popovic et al and Prlic et al cases.
Contributors:
Freya Baetens - Leiden University
Rogier Bartels - University of Amsterdam
Christine Bell - University of Cambridge
Kristen Boon - Seton Hall University
Eric de Brabandere - Leiden University
Mark Evans - Swansea University
Dieter Fleck - Former Director for International Agreements & Policy, Federal Ministry of Defence, Germany
Gregory Fox - Wayne State University
James Gallen - Dublin City University
Dina Haynes - New England School of Law
Dov Jacobs - Leiden University
Jann Kleffner - Swedish National Defence College
Larry May - Vanderbilt University
Frédéric Mégret - McGill University
Fionnuala Ní Aoláin - University of Minnesota Law School
Inger Österdahl - Uppsala University
Cymie Payne - Rutgers University
Yaël Ronen - Sha'arei Mishpat College
Aurel Sari - University of Exeter
Matthew Saul - Durham University
Astri Suhrke - Chr. Michelsen Institute
Roxana Vatanparast - Bryan Cave LLP
Martin Wählisch - European University Viadrina
Dominik Zaum - University of Reading