The European Commission adopted a proposal for a Directive, a group of Utrecht ľ¹Ï¸£ÀûÓ°ÊÓ researchers gave input for this much needed tool to help women.
A heteronormative marriage model still lies at the basis of parentage law. Laureen Hu's research focuses on rethinking this from a legal and ethical study.
Utrecht researchers have fully mapped out how much litter is washed up from the sea onto Dutch beaches, under which conditions it washes ashore and from where it originates.
IRW’s dr Lauren Gould appeared on the Dutch NOS Podcast ‘Met het Oog op Morgen’ to speak about civilian harm caused by the Dutch airstrike on Hawija in 2015. Gould’s appearance followed the news that lawyer Liesbeth Zegveld is to support eleven Iraqi survivors suing the Dutch state.
A new tool to share data about plastic pollution in the ocean has won this year’s edition of the Blue-Cloud Hackathon. The team, led by Delphine Lobelle, wins a €25.000 cash prize.
The empowerment and protection of children. That's what Charlotte Mol is promoting with her research. She received het doctorate degree in Family Law cum laude.
Law researchers from Utrecht ľ¹Ï¸£ÀûÓ°ÊÓ's NILOS institute participate in EU project to map and evaluate the regulation of (competing) environmental and economic uses of our seas
Alex Oude Elferink and Lan Ngoc Nguyen of Utrecht ľ¹Ï¸£ÀûÓ°ÊÓ edited the volume 'International Law and Marine Areas Beyond National Jurisdiction', published in January 2022
Catherine Blanchard of Utrecht ľ¹Ï¸£ÀûÓ°ÊÓ's Netherlands Institute for the Law of the Sea (NILOS) contributed to the article Mining the riches of the deep sea: an interdisciplinary challenge
They are developed in a context of international collaboration, trade and governance, but is the legal and normative framework we see today sustainable over time?
Mirko Noordegraaf was consulted on the design of the parliamentary inquiry into the 'toeslagenaffaire' and suspects we will see a different type of inquiry.
The Deep Transitions Futures research project has developed a global crowdsourcing initiative, the project introduces the three scenarios and asks participants to choose which future they want to live in.
Communication scientists Jan ten Thije and Inge Versteegt studied how asylum seekers value the information they receive from COA upon arrival. Student Houda Al Kalaf also contributed to the research.