Roelof H. Haveman (LLM Erasmus University Rotterdam, 1983;
PhD Utrecht University, 1998) currently works as a rule of law
expert in the embassy of the Netherlands in Bamako, Mali, after
having served for two years as a Senior Policy Advisor Rule of Law
within the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in the Hague.
Before, he worked as an independent Rule of Law consultant on short
assignments in Africa, inter alia between June 2010 and December
2012 for IDLO's office in South Sudan on technical assistance to
the judiciary, the College of Law of the University of Juba, the
Legal Training Institute and the Ministry of Justice. In between,
as of September 2011 until March 2012, he worked in Côte d'Ivoire,
assisting the Ministry of Justice. Since its start early 2008 until
May 2010 he was the Vice Rector in charge of Academic Affairs and
Research of the ILPD/Institute of Legal Practice and Development in
Rwanda, the post-graduate training institute for the justice
sector. He lived and worked in Rwanda as from 2005, initially for
the Dutch Center for International Legal Cooperation (CILC),
supporting two law schools in strengthening their academic and
managerial capacity and quality, including curriculum development.
In addition, in 2007-2008 he provided technical assistance in
organisational reform for the LDC-Law Development Centre in Uganda.
Since its establishment in 2002 and until 2005, he was the
programme-director of the Grotius Centre for International Legal
Studies at Leiden University's Campus in The Hague. Until the
summer of 2005 he was an associate professor of (international)
criminal law and criminal procedure at Leiden University and fellow
of the E.M. Meijers Institute of Legal Studies of the Faculty of
Law, Leiden University, the Netherlands. In 1998 he defended his
PhD-dissertation on the 'Conditions for Criminalizing Trafficking
in Women' (in Dutch) at Utrecht University, the Netherlands. Over
the past 20 years he published many articles and a number of books
on gender-related crimes, trafficking in persons and prostitution,
the principle of legality (e.g in the context of customary - adat -
criminal law in modern Indonesia), Rwanda gacaca, supranational
criminology and victimology, and comparative criminal law. He is
the editor in chief of the series Supranational Criminal Law and
editor in chief of the electronic Newsletter Criminology and
International Crimes.
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