From August 2014 to August 2018, the Geneva Academy was directed byRobert Roth.[citation needed]
In August 2018,
Marco Sassòli became Director of the Geneva Academy. He had been Professor of International Law at the University of Geneva Law Faculty since 2004 and had been teaching IHL at the Geneva Academy since this time.[citation needed]
In August 2020, Gloria Gaggioli, Associate/SNF Professor at the Law Faculty of the University of Geneva, took over-
.[2]
Instruction
The Geneva Academy offers three master's programmes:
LLM in International Humanitarian Law and Human Rights[3]
Master of Advanced Studies in Transitional Justice, Human Rights and the Rule of Law[4]
Executive Master in International Law in Armed Conflict[5]
The Geneva Academy offers a range of training and short courses for professionals on legal issues related to armed conflicts, human rights protection, transitional justice and international criminal justice.
Research
The Geneva Academy conducts legal research and policy studies in the fields of international law in armed conflict, human rights protection, transitional justice, international criminal justice, weapons law, or economic, social and cultural rights.
Current research projects include the protection of persons with disabilities during and following armed conflicts, human rights responsibilities and armed non-state actors, human rights and gender equality in the context of business activities, or the rights of peasants.
The Geneva Academy also runs the online platform Rule of Law in Armed Conflicts (RULAC) that systematically qualifies situations of armed violence using the definition of armed conflict under international humanitarian law.
The Geneva Academy is home to the Swiss Chair of International Humanitarian Law, currently held by Professor Robin Geiss, Professor of International Law and Security at the University of Glasgow, Director of the Glasgow Centre for International Law and Security (GCILS) and a former Legal Adviser to the International Committee of the Red Cross,[6] and the Human Rights Chair, currently held by Professor Nils Melzer, UN Special Rapporteur on torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.[7]
Villa Moynier
The Geneva Academy is headquartered at the Villa Moynier, a historic villa surrounded by a beautiful park with a view of Lake Geneva and Mont Blanc. It was the property of Gustave Moynier, the first President of the ICRC. It later housed the League of Nations in 1926 and served as headquarters for the ICRC between 1933 and 1946. Villa Moynier forms part of the Graduate Institute's Campus de la paix and is near the Maison de la paix.