Over the course of the 16 months of the fellowship, I presented my research at conferences across the disciplines of International Relations and International Law in Finland, Canada, the United Kingdom and Poland. I furthermore organized a one-day academic workshop at the University of Copenhagen that brought together scholars from International Relations and International Law to explore questions of legitimacy and (de-)legitimation in global governance.
To gain new empirical insights into the broader relevance of the decisions of international criminal courts, and how the legal authority of these courts is constructed, maintained and challenged in practice, I undertook three research visits to The Hague to conduct in-depth interviews with judges and legal officers at international criminal courts, as well as with diplomats and civil society representatives. Based on this empirical material, I was able to, among others, address the question of how the judgements of international criminal courts and tribunals have been received and disseminated.
Finally, I entered into a new, interdisciplinary research collaboration with a legal scholar and a data scientist to use case-law citation network analysis to compare how the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia and the European Court of Human Rights draw on their previous case law to justify their decisions.