Rosa Freedman
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+44 (0) 118 378 7507
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Professor of Law Conflict and Global Development
Areas of interest
Professor Freedman researches on the United Nations, and has a number of interests within that area: human rights bodies, creation and implementation of international human rights law, human rights of vulnerable groups (with specific focus on women's rights, SOGI rights, and freedom of religion/belief), accountability for human rights abuses committed by UN actors, preventing sexual exploitation and abuse in conflict and crisis zones, and the intersection between international law and international relations.
Rosa has published extensively on the United Nations Human Rights Council and on the United Nations Special Procedures system, as well as on the Haiti Cholera Claims and on sexual exploitation and abuse committed by peacekeeping personnel and humanitarian actors. She fuses doctrinal and empirical research methods, and she deploys interdisciplinary lenses to inform and underpin her findings and analysis. Her work has been funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council, British Academy, the Economic and Social Research Council, the Jacob Blaustein Institute for the Advancement of Human Rights, and the Society of Legal Scholars.
Rosa joined the ºÚ¹Ï³ÔÁÏÍø as the inaugural Chair of Law, Conflict and Global Development and the Director of the Global Development Division, having previously taught at Birmingham Law School and at Queen Mary University of London. She is an academic panel member at 4-5 Gray’s Inn Square and a founding member of the Intra-Communal Professorial Group on addressing antisemitism in UK academia and on campuses. Rosa has held various advisory positions, including being a member of the UN Secretary-General's Civil Society Advisory Board on preventing sexual exploitation and abuse, a member of the FCDO Steering Committee on the Global Framework, a specialist adviser to the UK Government, and the Civil Society Workstream Lead on the Prevention Project. Rosa works with a broad range of stakeholders, including international organisations, national governments, and civil society actors, and is regularly invited to provide expertise to those actors. She frequently appears in appears in print, online, radio, TV and documentary media.
Teaching
Rosa currently teaches on the following modules:
- Dissertation
- Gender and Law
- Human Rights Law, Policy, and Practice
- International Human Rights Law
- Research Writing Credit
Rosa is currently supervising seven PhD students, including co-supervision with colleagues from Archaeology, International Development, and International Relations.