[PAST EVENT] Making Ecocide an International Crime (Prof. Kate Mackintosh, UCLA)

November 23, 2021
1pm - 2pm
Location
Law School, Virtual
613 S Henry St
Williamsburg, VA 23185Map this location
Access & Features
  • Open to the public
Hixon Center, William & Mary Law School
Hixon Center, William & Mary Law School

The Human Security Law Center at William & Mary Law School will host a presentation by Professor Kate Mackintosh,  the inaugural Executive Director of the Promise Institute for Human Rights at UCLA School of Law.

Free admission to this virtual presentation.  Details below.

About Professor Mackintosh (read more on her UCLA biography page):

Kate Mackintosh is the inaugural Executive Director of the Promise Institute for Human Rights at UCLA School of Law. The Promise Institute was founded in 2017 with a $20 million gift to create a center on the West Coast for international human rights scholarship, training, and advocacy.

Mackintosh has worked in the fields of human rights, international criminal justice, and the protection of civilians for over two decades. She was involved in the development of international criminal law in its fledgling years and contributed to defining many elements of this new area of law, such as the elements of rape as an international crime, the definition of protected persons, and the scope of complicity for international crimes.

She has held multiple roles at international criminal tribunals, working as a lawyer with the judges; prosecution appeals counsel; co-counsel for the defense and finally as an administrator, responsible as Deputy Registrar for the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia’s court operations, witness protection and support services, legal aid scheme, detention facility, communications and outreach, languages services and archives.

Mackintosh has worked in the fields of human rights, international criminal justice, and the protection of civilians for over two decades. She was involved in the development of international criminal law in its fledgling years and contributed to defining many elements of this new area of law, such as the elements of rape as an international crime, the definition of protected persons, and the scope of complicity for international crimes.


Join us via Zoom at:

https://cwm.zoom.us/j/97214119816