樱花动漫

Exeter Centre for International Law

Welcome to the Exeter Centre for International Law

The Exeter Centre for International Law is home to a vibrant community of resident scholars, affiliated members and external visitors working in the field of international law. Our research interests and activities span a wide range of subjects and branches of law. We have particular expertise in the field of international human rights law, the law of armed conflict, international criminal law and international refugee law. We are an inclusive community and encourage students and fellow scholars at all levels to attend and participate in our events. Do get in touch!

Our mission

The Exeter Centre for International Law was established in 2014 to provide a focal point for the study of international law at the 樱花动漫. The Centre builds on a long and distinguished tradition of international legal scholarship at Exeter Law School, stretching back to the 1960s. The purpose of the Centre is to provide an intellectual environment to

  • promote the study and development of international law;
  • stimulate debate and collaboration in response to the most pressing challenges facing the international legal order; and
  • support teaching and training in the field of international law.

Our work

‌Our work reflects the idea that international law is not merely an academic subject, but also an area of legal practice. Many of our members have first-hand experience in the application of international law. We maintain strong links with practitioners outside academia, from senior legal advisors to international judges, from government representatives to the staff of non-governmental organisations. We also benefit from close links with colleagues working in related disciplines, including members of Exeter University’s Strategy and Security Institute.

Members of the Centre conduct research at the forefront of international legal scholarship. We pride ourselves on our contribution to the wider legal and policy community. We publish leading pieces in peer-reviewed journals and contribute to key academic blogs. We participate in the work of international professional societies and regularly contribute to international events in the UK and abroad. We convene workshops on emerging topics and lead research projects addressing contemporary legal challenges.

Our research informs our teaching. Drawing on their specific expertise and interests, members of the Centre deliver a variety of courses in international law at the undergraduate and the postgraduate level, including in the field of conflict and security law, international criminal law and justice, counter-terrorism and international human rights law.

News

New LinkedIn page for the ECIL

Follow for the latest discussions and events around International Law.


Award-winning cyber law resource has 2025 update

Led by of the 樱花动漫,now features 35 scenarios, each blending a description of a cyber incident with in-depth legal analysis


New book series featuring Professor Caroline Fournet

is one of the editors of a new book series with Cambridge University Press: . The series publishes significant original research that offers new perspectives on key debates and innovative works that showcase the dynamism of the field.


Feminist Judgments: Reimagining the International Criminal Court - Book launch dates

Feminist Judgments: Reimagining the International Criminal Court, edited by Kcasey McLoughlin, Rosemary Grey, Louise Chappell and Suzanne Varrall has been published. It includes a chapter by  from Exeter Law School and Dr Laura Graham reimagining the reparations order in the ICC’s Al Mahdi case.

Upcoming international launch events:

Monday 6 October 2025, 6:00pm

London – London School of Economics, Women, Peace and Security Centre

Thursday 9 October 2025, 10:00am

Paris – Sciences Po

Monday 13 October 2025, 6:00pm

Nuremberg – Centre for Human Rights Erlangen-Nürnberg (CHREN), in cooperation with the International Nuremberg Principles Academy and the Australian Human Rights Institute

Panel discussion: “Feminist Judgments and the International Criminal Court”

Friday 7 November 2025, 5:00pm

Sydney – Gilbert + Tobin, Barangaroo

 


Lola’s War: Sexual Violence, Impunity and Reintegration of War Criminals

27 November, 3.45 - 5pm, Streatham Court, Lecture Theatre B

In this seminar, Dr. Simi膰 talked about her recently published book, (Springer, 2023). The book offers a subtle understanding of the Bosnian war by listening to the voice of Lola, a rural Bosnian woman.


Justice for All: Innovations and Aspirations in International Criminal Law

Friday 15 November,  3.30pm, Streatham Court, Lecture Theatre B

A talk by Michelle Jarvis organised by: in collaboration with Exeter Centre for International Law(ECIL)


NEWS

Dr Chris O’Meara examines how the jus ad bellum applies to ASAT weapons and to the right of states to use them in space.


Professor Ana Beduschi’s latest study has been published in the Handbook on Warfare and Artificial Intelligence

AI can help humanitarians gain crucial insights to better monitor and anticipate risks, such as a conflict outbreak or escalation. But deploying systems in this context is not without risks for those affected.

 


Dr Annika Jones presents new data on the demographics of victim participation at the International Criminal Court (ICC)

Dr Jones presented the outcomes of her AHRC IAA funded research into the demographics of victim participation at the ICC. The data provides new insights into the inclusivity of the ICC’s victim participation scheme and barriers that must be addressed to enhance the Court’s ability to represent, support and provide agency to the communities that are most deeply affected by international crime.


Professor Ma膷ák joins discussion on the protection of civilian persons in time of war  

Between 30 April and 2 May 2024, Professor Kubo Ma膷ák participated in a semi-annual meeting of the Editorial Committee for the International Committee of the Red Cross’s Updated Commentary on the Fourth Geneva Convention relative to the Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of War. The project is a multi-year endeavour led by the ICRC that aims to contribute to a better understanding of, and respect for, international humanitarian law.
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Exeter Law school professor speaks at IHL event in Geneva

On 25 April 2024, Professor Kubo Ma膷ák spoke at an event for UN Member States, organized in Geneva by Switzerland and the Geneva Academy of International Humanitarian Law and Human Rights. Kubo presented his research on the international law aspects of the involvement of civilians in armed conflict through digital military technologies and its consequent impact on the protection of civilians.


Honouring the legacy of Professor Yoram Dinstein: Kubo Ma膷ák writes in the Lieber Institute’s blog Articles of War

The piece explores the legal justification for the separation between the jus in bello (international humanitarian law, IHL) and the jus ad bellum (law on the use of force), as well as some of its legal consequences.


樱花动漫 to lead groundbreaking international cyber law project

Professor Kubo Ma膷ák will be leading a team to put together “The Handbook on Developing a National Position on International Law in Cyberspace: A Practical Guide for States”. The project will be formally launched on Tuesday 28 May 2024 at the 16th International Conference on Cyber Conflict (CyCon) in Tallinn, Estonia.


Harriet Moynihan Speaks on Corporate Responsibility and Civic Freedoms at Exeter

On 30 November 2023, Exeter Law School hosted a talk by Harriet Moynihan (International Law Programme, Chatham House) titled “Upholding civic freedoms as part of geopolitical corporate responsibility”, part of the ongoing Axis of Protection Seminar Series.


Estonian Expert Provides Insight into Cyber Diplomacy’s Future

Dr Anna-Maria Osula, an official of the Department of Cyber and Digital Diplomacy at the Estonian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, spoke at the 樱花动漫 on Thursday 16 November 2023.

Dr Osula’s , set against the backdrop of the escalating use of information and communication technologies (ICTs) for malicious purposes, was centred around the past and present discussions at the United Nations Open-Ended Working Group (OEWG).


Exeter Professor Speaks on Civilian Protection at US Military Academy

In early November 2023,  participated in the 2023 Lieber Workshop on Civilian Protection in Armed Conflict, organized by the United States Military Academy at West Point, New York.


Dr Aurel Sari's writings about Israel and Gaza

has commented on the ongoing situation in Israel and Gaza, discussing the applicable rules of the law of war with and .

He has about the explosion at the Al-Ahli Hospital, explaining why we should not rush to premature conclusions without knowing the facts.


In this new article the authors, Professor Kubo Ma膷ák and Maxime Nijs, argue that despite recent signals of policy changes from the prosecutor, the likelihood of prosecuting cyber misconduct before the International Criminal Court in the near future remains uncertain due to the formidable challenges of gravity and attribution.


Prof. Caroline Fournet from the 樱花动漫 has co-edited with Dr Helen Tidy (School of Health & Life Sciences, Teesside University) a special issue of Science & Justice, entitled 'The Future of Teaching, Training and Learning in Forensic and Crime Sciences'. It was published online in November 2022.


The conference was co-organised by Prof. Caroline Fournet and Prof. Mark Drumbl (Washington & Lee University, USA) in Exeter on 20-21 October 2022. 


Latest edition of influential Cyber Law Toolkit tracks online warfare around the globe

Experts behind an influential research project charting global cyber law are tracking major online attacks across the world.

The  an established go-to resource for professionals and scholars working on international law and cyber operations, has been updated again for 2022.


There is an urgent need for the UK and allies to give clearer information about how they would respond in self-defence to ‘imminent’ armed attacks, a new study says.


On 22 September 2021, Dr Kubo Ma膷ák, the General Editor of the Cyber Law Toolkit, introduced its annual update at the CyberCon conference in Brno, Czech Republic.


Exeter Law School’s Professor Hitoshi Nasu has recently been appointed as a Non-Resident Senior Fellow at the Stockton Centre for International Law at the United States Naval War College.


The first seminar of the Axis of Protection Seminar Series took place at the Geneva Academy of International Humanitarian Law and Human Rights in Geneva, Switzerland.


Dr Beduschi discussed how new technologies, including artificial intelligence, impact humanitarian action in the context of international migration.


In October 2019, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) and Wuhan University, China, joined the Cyber Law Toolkit project led by Dr Kubo Ma膷ák.


Exeter Law School’s Professor Mike Schmitt has recently received a number of prestigious appointments.

 


Between 5 and 9 August 2019, Professor Hitoshi Nasu and Dr Kubo Ma膷ák attended the third meeting of the Woomera Manual on the International Law of Military Space Operations in The Hague, The Netherlands.


In a fitting close to the academic year, the textbooks on the law of armed conflict were donated to the Defence and Command Staff College of the Defence Force of Zambia.


On 24 July 2019, Dr Kubo Ma膷ák spoke at the Tallinn Summer School of Cyber Diplomacy on the topic “Cyber Operations and International Humanitarian Law”.


Three members of the Exeter Centre for International Law travelled to West Point in June 2019 to attend the second US Military Operations Course at the United States Military Academy.


International lawyers and cyber experts have worked together to give new guidance on how countries may respond to malicious cyber operations such as computer hacking aimed at interfering with foreign elections.


Mike Schmitt, Professor of Public International Law, has been busy training government officials around the world on international cyber law.


On 11 April, Dr Aurel Sari contributed to the launch of a report on hybrid threats at NATO Headquarters in Brussels.


In April 2019, the Exeter Centre for International Law hosted a conference on “Legal Resilience in an Era of Hybrid Threats”.


 will spend a month exploring the role of non-state led initiatives in the development of international cyber law at Leiden University’s . 


Our members and research interests

 

Name Research interests

International Human Rights Law, Refugee Law, Asian Studies, International Relations, Ethnic Conflicts, Racism and Extremism, Genocide, Nationality Law.

Law and Technology, Data Protection, Privacy, Fundamental Rights

Public international law; the law of armed conflict; feminist theory; feminist methodologies; the UN Security Council; women, peace and security.

International and European human rights law.

Sustainability in international economic law; gender and trade; EU external economic relations law and policy.

International Criminal Law and Procedure; Human Rights Law; European Convention on Human Rights; Right to a Fair Trial; Post-conflict Investigations; Investigations of International Crimes and of Gross Human Rights Violations; Forensic Evidence.

International law, International human rights law, Internal displacement, Refugee law, The European Convention and Court of Human Rights, Vulnerability, Access to higher education, Academic leadership.

Factors shaping the making and development of international law; Judicial dialogue and interaction between courts; International criminal law and procedure; International human rights, particularly in the context of international criminal trials; Public international law.

General international law; international humanitarian law; human rights law.

International criminal law; European Court of Human Rights.

Chris O'Meara

General International Law; use of force; self-defence; humanitarian intervention; international humanitarian law.

Business & human rights law, International economic law, rights of nature, corporate law, corporate governance, law and economic theory, law and development, legal history of the corporation, legal theory and methodology, human rights and documentary cinema, law and film, law and philosophy.

Public international law; the law of armed conflict; operational law; status of forces agreements; use of force; peacekeeping; collective security; NATO; hybrid warfare.

Khurram Usman

Phd Student

Mohammed Al Muqaimi

Phd Student

Jade Brailsford

Phd Student

Nicholas Fryer

Phd Student

Chris Gardiner

Phd Student

Projects

Handbook on Developing a National Position on International Law and Cyber Activities: A Practical Guide for States

Kubo Ma膷ák
ESRC IAA | 2024 – 2025


Events

For our next event we are collaborating with the Law and Human Rights student society:

Justice for All: Innovations and Aspirations in International Criminal Law

Fri 15 November, 3.30pm, Streatham Court, Lecture Theatre B

A talk by Michelle Jarvis

Michelle Jarvis has worked in the international criminal justice field for 24 years and took up the role of Deputy Head of the International, Impartial and Independent Mechanism (Syria) (IIIM) in December 2017. Prior to that she was the Deputy to the Prosecutor at the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) and the Mechanism for International Criminal Tribunals (MICT).

Michelle’s work has focused on bringing accountability to victims/survivors of crimes in the Balkans, Rwanda and Syria, as well as building capacity for accountability processes in many other conflict and post conflict areas. Michelle has worked extensively to promote innovative and agile approaches to accountability for core international crimes, including bringing visibility to the experiences of marginalized groups during accountability processes and strengthening legal responses. She has co-authored two books and numerous articles on the subject of gender and armed conflict and is a member of the Expert Group on the Establishment of an International Gender Justice Practitioner Hub.

Staff and students can .


Lola’s War: Sexual Violence, Impunity and Reintegration of War Criminals

27 November, 3.45 - 5pm, Streatham Court, Lecture Theatre B

In this seminar, Dr. Simi膰 will talk about her recently published book,  (Springer, 2023). The book offers a subtle understanding of the Bosnian war by listening to the voice of Lola, a rural Bosnian woman.


PREVIOUS EVENTS

April 2024:

"The Demographics of Victim Participation at the International Criminal Court"

With Dr Annika Jones

Full details of the event are on our events page here.


Watch this previous event:

Axis of Protection: Human Rights in International Law Seminar Series event

2 November 2022

This event was a collaboration between the  and the research centres.

"Data protection and cybersecurity: the not-so-impossible task of reconciliation" by Professor Eleni Kosta, Professor of Technology Law and Human Rights, Tilburg Institute for Law, Technology, and Society (TILT), Tilburg University.

 

ECIL Working Paper Series

General Editor:

Editor-in-Chief: 

The Working Paper Series was established by the Exeter Centre for International Law (ECIL) in 2017/18 in order to promote research outputs in the area of international law authored by members of the academic community at Exeter Law School. Enquiries about the series and requests for submission guidelines should be addressed to the editor-in-chief.

Papers published thus far are available at the links below.   

Chris O’Meara

Exploring the Necessity and Proportionality of Self-Defense in the Cyber Context. ECIL Working Paper 2025/2 (forthcoming in Martin Faix and Marko Svicevic (eds), Regulating the Use of Force in International Law: Principles, Perspectives and Challenges (Lieber Studies Series, Oxford University Press)

and Florentina Pircher 

Protecting civilians from harm caused by cyber operations during armed conflict. ECIL Working Paper 2025/1 (forthcoming in Robert Heinsch and Jelena Plamenac (eds), Research Handbook on Victims under International Law (Edward Elgar 2026))

Chris O’Meara Self-defence in outer space: Anti-satellite weapons and the jus ad bellum. ECIL Working Paper 2024/2 (forthcoming Leiden J. Int’l L.).
International Law in Human Rights Cases before the UK Courts. ECIL Working Paper 2024/1
The Role of International Human Rights Law in the Interpretation of the Fourth . ECIL Working Paper 2022/2 (forthcoming Isr. Y. B. Hum. Rts.)
Chris O’Meara Reconceptualising the right of self-defence against ?imminent? armed attacks. ECIL Working Paper 2022/1 (forthcoming J. Use of Force & Int’l L.)
 and Hitoshi Nasu NATO and Collective Defense in Space: Same Mission, New Domain. ECIL Working Paper 2021/2 (forthcoming Turkish Pol. Q.)‌
Covid-19 health status certificates: Key considerations for data privacy and hu. ECIL Working Paper 2021/1
Right to Health in GATS: Can the Public Health Exception Pave the Way for Compl ECIL Working Paper 2020/4 (forthcoming Pace Int’l L. Rev.)
Hitoshi Nasu The Laws of Neutrality in the Interconnected World: Mapping the Future ScenarioECIL Working Paper 2020/3 (forthcoming in Matthew Waxman and Thomas Oakley (eds) The Future Law of Armed Conflict (OUP 2021))
Military Space Operations. ECIL Working Paper 2020/2 (forthcoming in Sergey Sayapin (ed.), An Introduction to International Conflict and Security Law (T.M.C. Asser Press 2020))
‌. ECIL Working Paper 2020/1 (forthcoming Maast. J. Eur. & Comp. L.)
Hitoshi Nasu

Artificial Intelligence and the Obligation to Respect and to Ensure Respect for. ECIL Working Paper 2019/3 (forthcoming E Massingham and A McConnachie (eds) Ensuring Respect for International Humanitarian Law [Working Title] (Routledge 2020))

This is Cyber: 1 3 Challenges for the Application of International Humanitari. ECIL Working Paper 2019/2

Legal Resilience in an Era of Gray Zone Conflicts and Hybrid Threats. ECIL Working Paper 2019/1 (forthcoming Camb. Rev. Int. Aff.)  
Sephora Sultana & Hitoshi Nasu Invisible Soldiers: The Perfidy Implications of Invisibility Technology in BattECIL Working Paper 2018/7 (published in ET Jensen and RTP Alcala (eds), The Impact of Emerging Technologies on the Law of Armed Conflict (OUP 2019))
 & Michael N. Schmitt  ?Enemy Controlled Battlespace?: The Contemporary Meaning and Purpose of Additio. ECIL Working Paper 2018/6 (forthcoming Vand. J. Transnat’l L.)
The Big Data of International Migration: Opportunities and Challenges for State. ECIL Working Paper 2018/5 (forthcoming Geo. J. Int’l L.)
Jennifer Maddocks Outsourcing of Governmental Functions in Contemporary Conflict: Rethinking the . ECIL Working Paper 2018/4 (forthcoming Va. J. Int’l L.) 
Michael N. Schmitt

?Virtual? Disenfranchisement: Cyber Election Meddling in the Grey Zones of Inte. ECIL Working Paper 2018/3 (forthcoming Chi. J. Int'l L.) 

Harry Aitken & Hitoshi Nasu Human Degradation Technologies and International Law. ECIL Working Paper 2018/2 (forthcoming W Boothby (ed) New Technologies and the Law in War and Peace (CUP 2018))
Silent War: Applicability of the Jus in Bello to Military Space OperationsECIL Working Paper 2018/1 (forthcoming Int'l L. Stud.) 
Cross-Border Litigation in England and Wales: Pre-Brexit Data and Post-Brexit I. ECIL Working Paper 2017/3 (forthcoming Maast. J. Eur. & Comp. L.)
Vulnerability on Trial: Protection of Migrant Children?s Rights in the Jurispru. ECIL Working Paper 2017/2 (forthcoming B.U. Int’l L. J.)

ECIL Working Paper 2017/1

Contact us

 

For non-media enquiries about the Exeter Centre for International Law and its activities, please contact us in one of the following ways.

 

Email:

Post:

Exeter Centre for International Law
Law School
Amory Building
樱花动漫
Rennes Drive
Exeter
Devon
UK
EX4 4RJ

  

For media enquires, please contact the Press Office at pressoffice@exeter.ac.uk or +44 (0)1392 722307.