Our expert staff
Our internationally diverse community of staff and students gives us a breadth of cross-cultural perspectives and insights into law and justice around the world. This community ensures you graduate with a genuine worldview and a network of international contacts.
Dr Antonio Coco is the Co-Chair of the Journal of International Criminal Justice's Editorial Committee, and a member of the Expert Group on 'Mens Rea' for the research project 'Rethinking Secondary Liability for International Crimes' at the University of Amsterdam. He also previously worked with the Chambers of the Special Tribunal for Lebanon. He has published extensively on International Criminal Law issues and in 2022 published his monograph: .
Prof Carla Ferstman worked on justice system strengthening with the UN mission in Rwanda in the immediate aftermath of the 1994 genocide, on mass displacement in Bosnia and Herzegovina, and more recently as a judge on the Aban People's Tribunal, which considered mass crackdowns on protesters in Iran as crimes against humanity. As former Director of the international NGO REDRESS, she worked globally on universal jurisdiction cases, and provided support to international courts and tribunals and parties to proceedings to strengthen their work on victims' rights and reparation, including at the International Criminal Court, the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia, and the Extraordinary African Chambers.
Prof Geoff Gilbert is S茅rgio Vieira de Mello Professor of International Human Rights & Humanitarian Law and an expert on refugee law and displacement, as well as on issues related to transnational criminal law, extradition and surrender and the applicability of exclusion clauses under Art 1(f) of the Refugee Convention.
Dr Matthew Gillett prosecuted war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide cases in The Hague at the United Nations International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia and at the International Criminal Court. He has conducted investigations and missions in war zones including Afghanistan (2016), Ukraine (2022), and the Central African Republic (2017-2020). His has written widely on international criminal law, speech crimes, digital evidence, and environmental protection, including a monograph titled "Prosecuting Environmental Harm before the International Criminal Court" (Cambridge University Press, 2022).
Dr Marija Jovanovic is an expert in international human rights law with specialisation in human trafficking and modern slavery and she has carried out research and policy work in these areas. She has also published extensively, including her 2023 monograph: .
Dr Ebba Lekvall researches in the areas of transitional justice, indigenous rights and international criminal law. She previously served as a law clerk in the Trial Chamber of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia, where she assisted with the Stanisic and Zupljanin judgments and in the pre-trial phase of the Hadzic case. She also clerked at the International Criminal Court, Office of the Prosecutor, Jurisdiction, Complementarity and Cooperation Division, Situation Analysis Section. She has co-written (with Martinsson, D), 鈥淭he Mens Rea Element of Intent in the Context of International Criminal Trials in Sweden鈥 (2020) Scandinavian Studies in Law.
Dr Marina Lostal specializes in the areas of victim rights, reparations, and the protection of non-human entities (i.e. heritage, environment and animals). She was appointed expert by the International Criminal Court in the reparations phase of the Al Mahdi case in 2017, and then worked as a consultant for the Trust Fund for Victims of the ICC in the implementation of reparations in several cases. She has consulted for other organisations, such as UNESCO, Geneva Call and the Colombian Special Jurisdiction for Peace. Her two most important publications in the field are a book entitled International Cultural Heritage Law in Armed Conflict, published by Cambridge University Press, and a co-authored practitioner's guide to the chapeau elements of crimes against humanity, published by the Case Matrix Network.
Dr Meagan Wong has advised States on issues pertaining to immunities of state officials and technical drafting of domestic legislation in relation to the incorporation of international law. Notably, she participated in a session of the Assembly of States Parties to the ICC Statute as an accredited Advisor to a government delegation on matters pertaining to the ratification and implementation of the amendments concerning the crime of aggression. She has published extensively on the crime of aggression and is the author of a forthcoming monograph with Cambridge University Press, entitled Responsibility of States and Individuals: Aggression and the International Criminal Court.