Exeter Law School
Two smiling people - head and shoulder shot both wearing black and white tops

A seminar with Head of Law School, Caroline Fournet

Posted by The Law School

22 January 2025

The Stockholm Centre for International Law and Justice, in co-operation with the United Nations
Association of Sweden and Civil Rights Defenders, invites you to a seminar

“Sights, Sounds, and Sensibilities of Atrocity Prosecutions”

Date: 30 January 2025

Time: 14.00-16.00

Speakers: Mark Drumbl and Caroline Fournet

Venue: Online and In person (The event has a hybrid format, you can join via Zoom: Register below)

Description:
Drumbl and Fournet will present the edited collection Sights, Sounds, and Sensibilities of Atrocity Prosecutions.
The collection was published in 2024, it unlocks the look, sound, smell, taste, and feel of justice for massive human rights abuses. The volume, through twenty-nine expert contributors, examines the dynamics of the five human senses in how atrocity is perceived, remembered, and condemned. This book treks around the globe and extends through time. It reimagines what an atrocity means, reconsiders what drives the manufacture of law, and reboots the role of courtrooms and other mechanisms in the pursuit of justice. Sights, Sounds, and Sensibilities of Atrocity Prosecutions unveils how law translates sensory experience into its procedures and institutions, and how humanistic inputs shape perceptions of right and wrong. This book thereby offers a refreshing primer on the underappreciated role of aesthetics, time, and emotion in the world of law.

Bio:
Mark A. Drumbl is the Class of 1975 Alumni Professor of Law and Director of the Transnational Law Institute at Washington and Lee University, School of Law. He is author of Atrocity, Punishment, and International Law (CUP, 2007), Reimagining Child Soldiers in International Law and Policy (OUP, 2012), and Informers Up Close: Stories from Communist Prague (with Barbora Hola, OUP, 2024).
Caroline Fournet is Professor of Law at the University of Exeter. Her current research explores the use of
forensic evidence both in the investigation and prosecution of atrocity crimes and in the identification of victims and the building of post-atrocity memory. She is editor-in-chief of the International Criminal Law Review (Brill).

Registration: Registration by email (scilj@juridicum.su.se) 27 January at the latest.
NOTE: Please see the list of upcoming events on SCILJ’s new website by clicking here.

Back home Back