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  • Contributors

John D. Ciorciari is an assistant professor at the Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy, University of Michigan, and faculty affiliate at the University’s Center for Southeast Asian Studies. He is also an associate fellow of the Asia Society and a Senior Legal Advisor to the Documentation Center of Cambodia in Phnom Penh.

Janine Natalya Clark is a lecturer in International Politics and Ethnic Conflict in the Politics Department at the University of Sheffield, UK. She has also taught at the Queen’s University of Belfast and at the University of York, and has held two Postdoctoral Fellowships in the International Politics Department at Aberystwyth University. Her research interests include post-conflict societies, particularly in the former Yugoslavia and the African Great Lakes; war crimes; transitional justice; the relationship between criminal trials and inter-ethnic reconciliation; and research ethics. Clark is the author of Serbia in the Shadow of Milošević: The Legacy of Conflict in the Balkans (I.B. Tauris, 2008) and recent work includes: “UN Peacekeeping in the Democratic Republic of Congo: Reflections on MONUC and Its Contradictory Mandate,” 15 Journal of International Peacekeeping 3–4 (2011); “Justice, Peace and the International Criminal Court: Limitations and Possibilities,” 9 Journal of International Criminal Justice (2011); “Transitional Justice, Truth and Reconciliation: An Under-Explored Relationship,” 11 International Criminal Law Review (2011); “Missing Persons, Reconciliation and the View from Below: A Case-Study of Bosnia-Herzegovina, 10 Southeast European and Black Sea Studies (2010); and “Religion and Reconciliation in Bosnia and Herzegovina: Are Religious Actors Doing Enough?” 62 Europe-Asia Studies (2010).

Dominique Clément is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Sociology at the University of Alberta.

Kathryn Elvey is a Ph.D. candidate in Criminal Justice at University of Cincinnati in Ohio. She focuses on drug-crime relationships and victimization. She works for Human Rights Quarterly as a Senior Articles Editor, a distance learning facilitator for masters students, and teaches classes on race, class, and crime at UC.

David P. Forsythe is the University Professor and Charles J. Mach Distinguished Professor, Emeritus, at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln and taught human rights there for thirty-seven years. He held the Fulbright Distinguished Research Chair in Human Rights and International Studies at the Danish Institute of International Studies in Copenhagen in 2008. He is the General Editor of The Encyclopedia of Human Rights (Oxford University Press, 5 volumes, 2009) which won the Dartmouth Medal as the best reference publication in the United States that year. His financial gifts recently started an endowment for the UNL program in Human Rights and Humanitarian Affairs, now named in his honor. [End Page 923]

Kevin Jon Heller is a Senior Lecturer at Melbourne Law School, where he teaches international criminal law and criminal law. He holds a Ph.D. in law from Leiden University, a J.D. with distinction from Stanford Law School, an M.A. with honors in literature from Duke University, and an M.A. and B.A., both with honors, in sociology from the New School for Social Research. Heller’s publications have appeared in a variety of journals, including the European Journal of International Law, the American Journal of International Law, the Journal of International Criminal Justice, the Harvard International Law Journal, the Michigan Law Review, the Leiden Journal of International Law, the Journal of Criminal Law & Criminology, Criminal Law Forum, and the Georgetown International Environmental Law Review. His book The Nuremberg Military Tribunals and the Origins of International Criminal Law was published by Oxford University Press in June 2011, and Stanford University Press published his edited book (with Markus Dubber) The Handbook of Comparative Criminal Law in February 2011. He is a permanent member of the international-law blog Opinio Juris.

Hun Joon Kim is a Research Fellow in the Griffith Asia Institute and Centre for Governance and Public Policy at Griffith University. His research interests are international human rights, transitional justice, and international norm diffusion. He is the author of several journal articles published in Journal of Peace Research, International Studies Quarterly, the International Journal of Transitional Justice, Global Governance, and the Journal of Human Rights. He is currently completing a book manuscript, “The...

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