Recent blog posts
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The Climate Protection Paradox: When Bad Is Good and Good Is Bad?
By Michel Rouleau-Dick. Despite considerable progress in understanding when and how people displaced across borders in the context of climate change and disasters may be entitled to international protection, I argue that the current legal framework gives rise to a…
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M.A. and others v. France: Critical Criminological and Postcolonial Reflections
By Ira Salo and Yulia Dergacheva. In this post, we examine the latest European Court of Human Rights (the Court)decision on sex work – M. A. and others v France – a notable case in which the applicants, over 250…
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Will The Hague Really Look North? The ICC and EU Crimes Against Migrants
By Adrian Gjoshi. Europe and the International Criminal Court (ICC) stand at a pivotal moment. For the first time, EU migration policies and senior European officials are subject to direct international criminal scrutiny regarding the treatment of migrants in the…
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Third-Country National Victim’s Rights Should Not Be Separated From Considerations of Residence Situation
By Dionysia Kang. This piece examines Finland’s obligations towards third-country national victims of crimes, particularly in light of the stabbing in 2024 of Bangladeshi restaurant worker Rakibul Hasan Ridoy and of his subsequent inability to work. The post highlights the…
Learn more about the Institute for Human Rights at Åbo Akademi University
Founded in 1985, the Institute for Human Rights is situated within the Faculty of Social Sciences, Business and Economics, and Law at Åbo Akademi University. The mission of the Institute is to conduct outstanding academic research of high societal relevance and to offer research-based education in cooperation with national and international partners.
The current main areas of research are: social justice and the protection of economic, social and cultural rights; the protection of the rights of vulnerable groups, such as minorities, refugees, asylum seekers and migrants; and global development through human rights-based norms and strategies.
The Institute has a long-standing experience in arranging intensive courses in human rights law and related topics. Together with the Chair of Public International Law at Åbo Akademi University the Institute offers the Master’s Degree Programme in International Law and Human Rights.
The activities of the Institute are financed partly through the University’s budget and partly through project-based external funding. Under the directorship of Professor Elina Pirjatanniemi, the Institute operates with a number of in-house and visiting scholars specialising in the area of human rights.
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