Working group Criminalizing Human Rights and International Law Add to calendar 2025-05-07 11:30 2025-05-07 17:00 Europe/Rome Criminalizing Human Rights and International Law Sala degli Stemmi YYYY-MM-DD Print Share: Share on Facebook Share on BlueSky Share on X Share on LinkedIn Send by email Scheduled dates May 07 2025 11:30 - 17:00 CEST Sala degli Stemmi Organised by Department of Law This workshop, organised by the Human and Fundamental Rights Working Group and the International Law Working Group, features a keynote lecture by Philip Alston on his article 'Criminalizing Human Rights' as well as presentations by EUI researchers and alumni thematically centred around Professor Philip Alston’s article. Abstract - Criminalizing Human RightsThe priorities reflected in the overarching system that includes the regimes dealing with international human rights law, international humanitarian law, and international criminal law are currently undergoing a gradual but highly significant transformation. The cause is a growing preoccupation with ‘atrocity crimes’ in each of the three fields, along with the imposition of criminal sanctions in response to an ever increasing range of violations, the recasting of other violations as crimes (ecocide), and the urge to describe a great many situations as involving genocide. These developments have diminished the attention given to non-criminal violations and to techniques other than prosecution, and facilitated continuing neglect of the structural dimensions underpinning violations. In the foreign policies of key western states, sanctions against individuals now attract more attention than other human rights responses. The risk is that these trends will entrench an atrocity-centred normative hierarchy, empower judges and criminal lawyers at the expense of social movements, shine a spotlight on individual rather than collective responsibility, reinforce problematic North-South dynamics, and distort resource allocations at the international level.View the full programme in the attachment below. Attachments Event programme