
Anita Ušacka
International Criminal Court Judge
Graduated from the Law Faculty of the Latvian State University
Doctor of Law, the professor at the University of Latvia
In 1994-1996 – Executive Director of UNICEF
In 1996-2003 – the judge of the Constitutional Court of the Republic of Latvia
Since March 2003 – the judge of the International Criminal Court (judicial and appellate division)
In 2011-2012 – the President of the Appeals Division of the International Criminal Court
International Criminal Court in Action

Mykola Gnatovskyy
President of European Committee for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment
DRI's Senior Constitutional Expert
Graduated from the Institute of International Relations of the Taras Shevchenko National University, Kyiv, also trained at Harvard University (USA) and York University (Canada)
Since 2009, the member of the European Committee for the Prevention of Torture, Vice-president in 2013-2015
Since 2015, President of the Committee
As an expert, he cooperates with the Council of Europe, the OSCE, UNDP, the International Committee of the Red Cross, and others
Expert in international humanitarian law, international criminal law and international human rights law, author of more than 80 scientific publications.
Can the International Criminal Court Meet Ukraine's Expectations?

Peter Herbert Wilkitzki
Honorary Vice-President of International Association of Penal Law
Graduated from the University of Erlangen-Nuremberg and the University of Bonn
In 1991-1993 – Head of the European Committee on Crime Problems
Since 2000 – member of the Board of Trustees of the Max Planck Institute (Freiburg, Germany)
Since 2009 – Vice President of the International Association of Penal Law
Since 2012 – honorary professor of international criminal law and international criminal procedural law at the University of Cologne. The author of a series of publications on implementation and interpretation of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court
German Law and Practice on International Crimes and International Criminal Jurisdictions

Ani Harutyunyan
National Assembly (Parliament) of Armenia, Standing Committee on Defense and Security
Creator and author of the International Law Blog "Beyond Flatland"
The Space for Gravity: Selection or Selectiveness of Cases and Crimes at the ICC?

Lilya Belfer
National Research University Higher School of Economics, Moscow, Russia, Fourth year undergraduate student
The burden of proof for defenses before the ICC

Małgorzata Myl
University of Silesia in Katowice, Faculty of Law and Administration, Professor assistant, PhD student, Department of International Public Law and European Law
‘Family’ as a victim of international crimes

Mylana Pfeiffer
University of Strasbourg (France), Postgraduate student
The ICC complementarity principle “under the shoes” of States?)

Eike Christian Fesefeldt
Dr. iur. in International Criminal Law from the Philipps-University of Marburg
LLM from the Victoria-University of Wellington
Lecturer in Criminal Law at the FOM University of Applied Sciences for Economics and Management
Bringing Jihadists to Justice - International Criminal Law applied by German High Courts

Viacheslav Tuliakov
Vice-Rector of the National University "Odessa Law Academy" on international relations
ECHR judge ad hoc for the cases against Ukraine
Victimology of international criminal law

Oumar Ba
Assistant professor of political science in Morehouse College
The ICC as Testament to Hope and Symbol of Deception: International Justice and the Postcolonial Condition

Vitaliy Gutnyk
Associate professor at Ivan Franko National University of Lviv
Some questions of cooperation between Ukraine and the International Criminal Court

Iryna Marchuk
Associate Professor, Faculty of Law Research Centres
CILCC - Centre for international law, Conflict and Crisis at the University of Copenhagen
The International Criminal Court’s 15 th Anniversary: Between Politics, Combatting Impunity and Making Local Impact

Dmytro Koval
Associate professor of International Law and International Relations Department at National University "Odesa Law Academy"
Head of the Center for International Law and Justice (CILJ)
Contextual elements of international crimes: why are they so important and where do they come from?

Nataliia Hendel
Associate professor of International Law and International Relations Department at National University "Odesa Law Academy"
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