Grotius Centre for International Legal Studies, Leiden University
Summer Courses 2015
The Grotius Centre for International Legal Studies
is a centre of Leiden University dedicated to research, teaching, and
training in public international law. The Centre has activities that
take place in Leiden as well as in The Hague. In The Hague, where the
centre forms part of the Campus Den Haag, the Centre is in close
proximity to important international legal institutions.
The
Grotius Centre for International Legal Studies has been organizing
unique and high-level summer courses for graduate students and young
professionals since 2003. This Summer, the Centre if offering 7 courses.
Women, Peace and Security - Challenges and Achievements
8 - 19 June 2015
In
2000, the UN Security Council adopted Resolution 1325, the first in a
series of six resolutions on Women, Peace and Security, which not only
recognizes the disproportionate impact of armed conflict on women but
also stresses the crucial importance of including women in all phases of
peace processes to ensure sustainable peace and security. Experience
has shown that the challenges to implementing these resolutions remain
significant. A great deal remains to be done in the areas of gender
justice, reflecting on masculinities, peace-building, conflict
transformation and the promotion of human rights. This course provides a
forum for learning and exchange. It will offer insights to the Women,
Peace and Security agenda and a unique opportunity to network with
professionals from different regions, countries and contexts.
International Criminal Law - From Theory to Practice
22 June - 3 July 2015
This
summer school offers a unique opportunity to gain expertise in
international criminal law in the International City of Peace and
Justice in just two weeks time. The course, which welcomes around 50
participants from all over the world, combines theory with practice:
academics from Leiden University and experts from the international
courts and tribunals lecture on topics as genocide, crimes against
humanity, the crime of aggression, war crimes and modes of liability,
while students develop their skills through an inter-active
cross-examination session with senior trial lawyers from the Office of
the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court and a challenging
moot court exercise.
International Children’s Rights - Frontiers of Children’s Rights
6 - 10 July 2015
Frontiers
of Children’s Rights takes a close look at contemporary children's
rights issues from a legal perspective, accompanied by reflections from
other academic disciplines, legal systems, local perceptions and
realities. Leading academic and professional experts in the field of
children's rights, international law and other relevant disciplines
offer inspiring and interactive lectures, seminars and excursions in and
around the historical university town of Leiden. The sessions will
focus on children’s rights and juvenile justice, children’s rights and
alternative care, children’s rights and global issues, children’s rights
and international criminal law, children’s rights and the virtual world
and monitoring children’s rights.
Children’s Rights and Business - Children are Everyone’s Business
6 - 9 July 2015
Business
has enormous power to improve children’s lives through the way in which
they operate facilities, develop and market products, provide services,
and exert influence on economic and social development. Conversely,
business has the power to disregard or even imperil the interests of
children. This course, offered in close cooperation with UNICEF,
provides a comprehensive overview of the framework that has been
developed to guide business’ interactions with children, including the
standards and tools that are available to companies and governments. The
sessions will cover The UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human
Rights as a framework for a focus on children, Children’s Rights and
Business Principles, company management processes and practices for
advancing children’s rights, the governmental responsibility to protect
children’s rights in the context of business activities, the role of
civil society and international organizations in promoting and
protecting children’s rights in the context of business activities and
child rights in the context of the travel and tourism as well as the
extractive industries. Company representatives, staff of international
organizations, government employees and graduate students with a
demonstrated interest in this topic are invited to apply.
Human Rights and Transitional Justice - Justice, Reparations and Development
13 - 17 July 2015
The
relationship between human rights, transitional justice and
development requires fresh attention. The field of transitional justice
has evolved in the past decade to include social, economic, cultural and
legal dimensions, and to cover larger objectives such as rule of law
and development. While a more holistic view on transitions might be
welcome, the different fields may conflict with each other. Justice
actors are not development agents, nor are development actors
necessarily best agents for accountability, truth or reparations. Making
development assistance contingent on rule of law reform may be counter
productive, since it may create dependencies or discrepancies in
relation to needs of protection or other more pressing socio-economic
needs (health, education, access to resources etc.). Conversely,
promoting justice through instruments of development may have
significant downsides. As evidenced in the transitional justice context,
awarding reparation through development programmes may leave victims
with a feeling that their suffering is not sufficiently recognized. More
work is required to identify how the mutual synergies between these
fields may be used most effectively to the benefit of all of them. This
is the central inquiry of this Summer School. It explores linkages, as
well as tensions between justice processes, reparations and development.
Advocacy and Litigation Training Course - Advocacy and Litigation before International Courts & Tribunals
13 - 17 July 2015
During
this intensive course, run by two highly experienced international
criminal defence lawyers, participants will be engaged in role play and
practical exercises and improve their advocacy and litigation skills.
The training will focus on the skills of case theory, opening
statements, direct examination (examination-in-chief), cross-examination
(previous inconsistent statements), re-examination, closing statements
and legal submissions skills. The course will be concluded with a mock
trial at the end of the week, in which participants can apply their
acquired knowledge and skills. Apart from the theory and the practical
exercises, the course includes visits to the International Criminal
Court and the Special Tribunal for Lebanon. A special guest lecture will
be given by a leading Defence Counsel at the Special Tribunal for
Lebanon. Professionals as well as graduate law students who wish to
develop and improve their advocacy skills are invited to register.
Advanced Course on International Criminal Law Special Focus: Gender Justice
24 August - 4 September 2015
This
new advanced course, offered by The Hague Academy of International Law
in cooperation with the Grotius Centre for International Legal Studies
of Leiden University, with the support of the Ministry of Foreign
Affairs of the Netherlands, provides in-depth understanding, discussion
and training in the theory and practice of International Criminal Law.
This year’s session focuses on Gender Justice, with a particular
emphasis on a critical evaluation of persistent challenges and emerging
responses to sexual and gender-based violence.
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