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Gastvortrag Bettinger-López, 17.06.2025

On June 17, 2025, the Institute for Comparative Criminal Law, in cooperation with the Feminist Law Clinic had the pleasure of welcoming Professor Caroline Bettinger-López for her lecture titled "Domestic Violence as a Human Rights Violation – A View from the United States and Beyond."

Professor Bettinger-López began by recounting a case that has been a recurring focus of her work for over two decades: the case of Jessica Lenahan. The failure of the police to enforce a restraining order against Lenahan’s ex-husband ultimately led to the deaths of their three daughters. Although the order, and Colorado state law, included the language “shall arrest” in case of a violation, and a law was in effect requiring officers to make an arrest whenever a domestic violence restraining order was violated, the U.S. Supreme Court held that police officers retained discretion in enforcement under the U.S. Constitution.

Refusing to accept the Supreme Court’s ruling, Lenahan approached the American Civil Liberties Union, stating: “Everybody has a boss. The Supreme Court needs a boss.” With the support of the ACLU and Professor Bettinger-López, the case was taken to the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights. In a landmark decision, the Commission found that U.S. police and courts had violated Articles I, II, VII, and XVIII of the American Declaration of the Rights and Duties of Man. From these violations, it derived a state duty to protect women and children from domestic violence. Drawing on this ruling, Professor Bettinger-López illustrated how gender-based violence constitutes a violation of fundamental human rights, such as the right to a dignified life, to equality, and security of the person. The conclusion of this first part of the lecture already gave rise to a lively discussion.

In the second part, Professor Bettinger-López discussed her efforts to integrate human rights principles into U.S. law. In the face of the fact that the Commission’s decision in the Lenahan case placed no binding obligations on U.S. lawmakers, her policy work came to focus on both collaboration with municipalities and advocacy at the federal level. For instance, she contributed to the development of a gender-sensitive guidance for police officers responding to domestic violence cases.

Professor Bettinger-López also offered a critique of U.S. exceptionalism by taking a global approach: while the United States has developed policies and programs aimed at eliminating gender inequality abroad, it has long lacked a comparable domestic framework. In 2023, Professor Bettinger-López served as a Senior Advisor in the Biden-Harris Administration and co-led the development of such a framework: the U.S. National Plan to End Gender-Based Violence. Drawing inspiration from models adopted by other countries, the Plan particularly stresses prevention and includes mechanisms for monitoring its implementation.

Following a lively round of applause, the lecture concluded with audience members raising nuanced questions about gender-based violence in the U.S.

Salka Suhr

Gastvortrag Caroline Bettinger-López, 16.06.2025

Law Clinics, Universities and Liberal Thought: Finding Clarity in a Time of Chaos and Cacophony

It takes a particular type of mental energy to blend out the discrepancy between the practical circumstances in which the ICCL’s most recent guest lecture by University of Miami School of Law Prof. Dr. Bettinger-López came together on a sunny Monday evening (June 16th) at the Cologne International Forum – the University’s International House had kindly agreed to cooperate with us and the Chair for US Law, the talk was advertised through all major University communication channels, critical voices were welcomed during the discussion and this report will most likely be published uncensured on the University website – and the actual content of the talk: “Law Clinics, Universities and Liberal Thought: Finding Clarity in a Time of Chaos and Cacophony.”. 

The space that we at the University of Cologne still take for granted – to hear from speakers from other countries, to compare and exchange ideas, to agree and disagree – is shrinking for Bettinger-López and her colleagues at US-American universities and law schools. To be sure: Law clinics such as the Human Rights Law Clinic which Bettinger-López leads at her university – like all organizations that speak truth to power – have met with persistent irritation from politicians and big business before. Even the law faculties themselves have sometimes made it more difficult, for example, by withholding status and tenure for clinicians. However, the most recent Trump Administration’s attacks on universities all over the country have heightened the stakes for critical engagement to an unprecedented level: In a country where both private and public universities depend – despite support from private donors – largely on federal government funding, withdrawing several hundred million dollars from a university (as has happened to Columbia University) – leaves an impact. So do new systems of post-tenure review (so far, for public universities only): Where lifetime employment as a university professor is no longer a guarantee and nationalist sentiments become mainstream, fearmongering and polarization in the faculties is the consequence. In a climate like this, publishing a simple student report – such as this one – might still be possible – but – university administrations and communications departments are increasingly scrutinizing the work of law clinics, balancing academic freedom and law clinic confidentiality with what words and concepts could land the university on a “blacklist” with the federal or state government.   On the one hand, accepting a university’s new communications guideline might turn out to constitute just the right amount of flexibility to keep the peace (and government funding) while saving energy for more important political battles which may very well lie ahead. On the other hand, Prof. Bettinger-López described the unease with which university professors in the country of free speech direct their students to be careful what they say and write. 

Many law clinics are working to alleviate the most drastic consequences of the first few months under Trump II: Immigration Law Clinics have been working to support migrants facing deportation with rapid response teams (such as at Cornell); another clinic at Northwestern supports protesters with legal advice. Still, the two US-Americans in the room, Prof. Bettinger-López and Prof. Junker from the University of Cologne’s Chair for US Law agreed that Trump II and its project 2025 took American universities and law clinics by surprise. The networks and strategies to protest and persevere are building, but slowly. Law Clinics and Universities as protective spaces for liberal thought? – for Prof. Bettinger-López and her colleagues, this idea has suddenly turned from a liberal democracy standard to an institution that depends on every individual’s willingness to fight for it. 

Laura Midey 

Gastvortrag Dr. Christoph Hebbecker

Am 16. Mai 2025 hielt Dr. Christoph Hebbecker von der Generalstaatsanwaltschaft Köln einen Vortrag im Rahmen der Gesprächsreihe „Internationales Strafrecht“, zum Thema „Digitale Hasskriminalität – Ermittlungsansätze und aktuelle Entwicklungen aus Sicht der Strafverfolgungsbehörden“. Sein Vortrag erfolgte zugleich in Kooperation mit der Feminist Law Clinic im Rahmen der Ringvorlesung „Feminismus & Recht“. 

Zu Beginn stellte Dr. Hebbecker die „Zentral- und Ansprechstelle Cybercrime Nordrhein-Westfalen (ZAC NRW)“ vor und skizzierte dann relevante Straftatbestände wie z.B. §§ 86, 86a StGB (Verbreiten bzw. Verwenden verfassungswidriger Kennzeichen), § 130 StGB (Volksverhetzung), § 140 StGB (Billigung von Straftaten) und §§ 185 ff. StGB (Beleidigungsdelikte), mit deren Verfolgung Abteilung 3 der ZAC zu digitaler Hasskriminalität befasst ist. Er berichtete über die Initiativen „Wer hetzt, verliert!“ und „Verfolgen statt nur Löschen“, die sich in Kooperation mit Bundesliga-Fußballvereinen und Mediengruppen zur effektiveren Verfolgung von Hasskriminalität einsetzen. Als zentrales Problem bei der Verfolgung von Äußerungsdelikten identifizierte Dr. Hebbecker den Anzeigeprozess und sprach über digitale Lösungsmöglichkeiten sowie über Hürden bei deren Umsetzung in der Praxis.

Anhand eindrücklicher Praxisbeispiele widersprach Dr. Hebbecker dem Narrativ, die Verfolgung dieser Straftaten bilde einen Angriff auf die Meinungsfreiheit und betonte, Strafverfolgung in diesem Bereich ziele gerade darauf ab, Räume zu schützen, die gerade die Ausübung der Meinungsfreiheit gewährleisten sollen. Herr Dr. Hebbecker veranschaulichte zudem Herausforderungen bei der Identifizierung von Beschuldigten im digitalen Raum anhand von Auskunftsersuchen gegenüber internationalen Big-Tech-Konzernen. Zuletzt setzte sich Herr Dr. Hebbecker mit aktuellen Gesetzesreformen auf europäischer (Digital Services Act) und nationaler (Digitale-Dienste-Gesetz) Ebene auseinander. Er bewertete die Bestrebungen dabei grundsätzlich positiv, wies jedoch kritisch darauf hin, dass Anzeigepflichten der Online-Plattformen im Vergleich zum Netzwerkdurchsetzungsgesetz abgeschwächt wurden.

Paul Matthies

Gastvortrag: Dr. Kalika Mehta

Permanent Suspicion: Tracing Coloniality in Criminal Law

“Permanent suspicion” is what our most recent guest and speaker as part of our ICCL lecture series, Dr. Kalika Mehta, both detected (regarding colonial subjects) and advocated for (regarding criminal laws today) in her research, tracing – as the subtitle of her talk suggested – coloniality in criminal laws. A quick Google search („It didn’t take me long to google these examples.“) hints at the extent of the problem: “Crimmigration“, the populist entanglement of migration and crime in the German public discourse, structural racism in the United Kingdom police force and a recent Indian bill for tougher rape laws all form part of a phenomenon central to the post-colonial analysis of criminal law: Construction of the other. This concept, Mehta explained, connects the historical episode of European colonialism (yes, dispossession of land is a recurrent feature of history, she concedes to popular criticism, but: 85% of the globe were colonized by European powers, this European colonialism was much more violent and constituted a parallel development to the expansion of modern capitalism, thus its extractive nature which resulted in a complete restructuring of colonial economies where human and natural resources only ever flow in one direction, the mother country) to today’s political and legal realities. It helps us trace coloniality, which Mehta defines as the continuation of colonialism as a belief system and pattern of thought that persists despite decolonization, which is to be understood as a continuing practical process. In fact, historical colonial powers, motivated by what Frantz Fanon called permanent suspicion against the colonial subject, used the construction of the colonial subject as the other, for example, as part of their anti-vagrancy laws, as a key feature of their oppressive regimes. While those political structures have ceased to exist, Mehta concluded, it is their “boomerang” effects in the Metropole, hidden in concepts such as the neutrality of law, the universality of international law or common modes of interpretation of law, which we as criminal law scholars should be suspicious towards today. What remains of law as a concept in the face of such fundamental criticism? While Mehta advocates constructive reform, she remained skeptical when asked, in the subsequent discussion, about the counter-hegemonical potential of international criminal law (one of her many other areas of expertise): Without Global South inclusion in, for example, the development of the list of core crimes, permanent suspicion towards the concept of an international community, remains, in her opinion, necessary. 

 

Laura Midey 

Gastvortrag: Dr. Matilde Botto

On April 15, 2025, Dr. Matilde Botto from the Università di Bologna gave a guest lecture as part of the International Criminal Law series, held in cooperation with the Feminist Law Clinic. Her talk, "Comparative Perspectives on Sexual Offences Law Reform: The Role of Consent and the Distinction between (Sexual) Assault and Harassment", provided valuable insights into Italian sexual offences law, placing it in a broader European context through a comparative legal lens. 

Dr. Botto began by outlining the concept of sexual autonomy, focusing on the protection against unwanted sexual contact (negative sexual autonomy). She identified two key challenges for European lawmakers: transitioning to a consent-based legal model and addressing non-physical sexual harassment in criminal law. While international and EU standards increasingly demand consent-based frameworks, national laws vary. Dr. Botto presented different legislative approaches and emphasized the necessity to adapt to new – especially digital – forms of harassment.

In the Italian context, she examined Article 609-bis of the Penal Code – the only provision explicitly criminalising sexual violence, limited to physical acts. This broad provision covers both minor harassment and serious assaults, without a clear legal stance on consent. Dr. Botto criticised the lack of legal precision, noting that while the courts’ broad and often liberal interpretations may align with international standards, they also raise concerns regarding the principle of legality. She called on the Italian legislature to provide clearer legal definitions and to include non-physical harassment, which is currently only addressed indirectly through general offences like “stalking.”

The lecture concluded with a lively discussion, further exploring legal avenues for criminalising sexual harassment.

Salka Suhr

Prof. Dr. Weißer beim Podcast "Lange Nacht" von Deutschlandfunk Kultur

Prof. Dr. Weißer zum Thema “Der Paragraf 218 und die aktuelle Debatte um seine Reform” im Podcast “Lange Nacht” von Deutschlandfunk Kultur.

 

Report TOC 2025

Students from the University of Cologne have traveled to Ferrara to take part in the annual Transnational Organised Crime seminar, held in the context of the Transnational Organised Crime programme, a collaboration between the University of Queensland, Australia, and the University of Vienna, Austria (both represented by Prof. Dr. Andreas Schloenhardt), the University of Zurich, Switzerland (Ass.-Prof. Gian Ege), the University of Ferrara, Italy (Prof. Dr. Serena Forlati), and the Institute for Comparative Criminal Law at the University of Cologne (Prof. Dr. Bettina Weißer). This year‘s seminar was dedicated to the complex issue of trafficking in artefacts and antiquities as a field of organised crime. The participants explored a variety of topics, such as the origins and movement of cultural property, both national and international legal frameworks regarding the protection of cultural property as well as the networks behind their illicit trade. Additionally, they examined other legal aspects such as prevention, investigation, confiscation and the restitution of stolen cultural property. 

UQ News

University of Ferrara

University of Vienna

 

Gastvortrag Prof. Dr. Serena Forlati Università degli studi di Ferrara

Titel: The United Nations Convention against Transnational Organized Crime and International Human Rights Law.
Datum: 22.01.2025, 18 Uhr
Ort: Seminargebäude, Tagungsraum 0.04

39. Tagung für Rechtsvergleichung 2024 in Berlin: „Globaler Süden – globaler Norden“

Der Vorstand der Gesellschaft für Rechtsvergleichung kündigt die 39. Tagung für Rechtsvergleichung vom 12. bis 14. September 2024 in Berlin zu dem Thema
„Globaler Süden – globaler Norden“ an.
Detaillierte Informationen enthält das Tagungsprogramm. Eine Programmübersicht bietet das Plakat zur Tagung. Die Anmeldung finden Sie hier.

 

Report International Conference: The United Nations Convention Against Transnational Organised Crime Turns 25

On the occasion of the 25th anniversary of the signing of the United Nations Convention against Transnational Organised Crime (UNTOC) and its Protocols, the Institute for Comparative Criminal Law had the great pleasure of welcoming experts and researchers from all over the world at Schloss Wahn to examine and vividly discuss the challenges and controversies of the UNTOC and its three Protocols.

Mark Shaw, Director of the Global Initiative against Transnational Organised Crime, started off the conference with his engaging keynote address. He addressed the main issues of the UNTOC: globalization, digital transformation and corruption of political leaders. Although the UNTOC can be viewed as a major political and legal achievement in the fight against organised crime, implementations of public and transparent review mechanisms are still missing.

In the first panel, chaired by Bettina Weisser, Francesco Calderoni (Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore and Transcrime) outlined the evolution of the UNTOC and questioned the rather vague and broad definition of what constitutes organised crime. A practical insight into the application of the UNTOC was provided by Calogero Ferrara, European Delegated Prosecutor. Using the fight against organised crime in Italy as a blueprint, Ferrara applauded the incorporation of the „economic dimension“ (Falcone method) in the UNTOC and stressed the importance of international cooperation for using confiscation as a tool in combating organised crime groups.

The second panel, chaired by Andreas Schloenhardt, focused on the Protocol against Smuggling of Migrants as well as the Firearms Protocol. Frank Zimmermann (Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg) critically reflected on the interpretation, exceptions and limitations of the main regulations in the Protocol against Smuggling of Migrants and questioned the lack of liability of public officials in this context. Following up on this, the progress and prospects of the Protocol were analysed by Luigi Achilli (European University Institute, Florence). He compared the differences in theory and practice and, in view of the future, asked for a more proactive, cooperative approach for effective migration management and humanitarian success. Afterwards, Max Menn (UNODC, Firearms Trafficking Section) illustrated the evolution and experiences of the Firearms Protocol by pointing out the global dimension of firearms and the challenges imposed by technological developments.

The third panel was chaired by Joseph Lelliott (University of Queensland). First, Marika McAdam, Independent International Legal Consultant and Policy Adviser specialised in rights-based criminal justice responses to human trafficking and migrant smuggling, focused on the relationship between the UNTOC itself and the Trafficking in Persons Protocol. She drew attention to transnational organised trafficking networks which are – in contrast to “small traffickers” – not in the spotlight of the UNTOC’s national implementations. The second speaker, Parosha Chandran (King’s College, London, Human Rights Barrister at One Pump Court Chambers and Parliamentary Advisor) gave an inspiring overview of her work protecting victims of human trafficking from criminal punishment. With regard to her daily work, she particularly criticised the absence of an obligatory no-punishment-provision for victims in the UNTOC and emphasised the need for amendments.

To conclude, the fourth panel, chaired by Florian Jessberger (Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin) concentrated on the future of UNTOC. The first speaker, Julia Geneuss (Universität Bremen) pointed out obstacles and challenges which may arise from further crime types such as poly-crimes, digitalization and environmental crimes. In addition, Karine Bannelier (Université Grenoble Alpes) discussed recent negotiations about a UN convention against transnational organised cybercrime and assessed its possible scope, purpose and impact. Finally, Neil Boister (University of Canterbury, New Zealand) illustrated difficulties regarding international cooperation under the UNTOC, using the example of extradition. He emphasised the importance of reciprocity, communication, recognition of crimes, political legitimacy and trust for an effective cooperation between signatory states.

Many thanks to our excellent speakers and guests for an inspiring conference!