Speaker
Dr Daria Mattingly
Daria Mattingly is a lecturer in European history at the University of Chichester and an Affiliated Lecturer in Slavonic Studies at the University of Cambridge. She received her doctoral degree from the University of Cambridge, where she has been teaching Soviet and Russian history as a Leverhulme Early Career Fellow. Daria Mattingly completed her MA in history at the University of Bristol and in philosophy at Kyiv Shevchenko University in Ukraine. After providing research assistance to Anne Applebaum for her book on the Holodomor, Daria Mattingly is currently finishing her monograph on the rank-and-file perpetrators of the famine. Her most recent academic publications include “Sexual Violence During Collectivization and the Holodomor,” Women’s Dimensions of the Past: Perceptions, Experiences, Representations, ed. Oksana Kis (Lviv: Centre for Urban History, 2023) and “Stalinism and the Holodomor,” Ukraine's Many Faces: Land, People, and Culture Revisited, eds. Olena Palko and Manuel Férez Gil (Beilefeld: Transcript, 2023).
Speaker
Prof Alex de Waal
Alex de Waal is executive director of the World Peace Foundation and Research Professor at the Fletcher School, Tufts University. He has worked on the Horn of Africa, and on conflict, food security and related issues since the 1980s as a researcher and practitioner. He served as a senior advisor to the African Union High Level Panel on Sudan and South Sudan. He was listed among Foreign Policy’s 100 most influential international intellectuals in 2008 and Atlantic’s 29 ‘brave thinkers’ in 2009. De Waal’s recent books include: The Real Politics of the Horn of Africa: Money, War and the Business of Power (Polity 2015), Mass Starvation: The history and future of famine (Polity 2018), and New Pandemics, Old Politics: 200 years of the war on disease and its alternatives (Polity 2021).
Speaker
Catriona Murdoch
Catriona Murdoch is one of the partners at Global Rights Compliance. Catriona is an expert in International Criminal Law and recognised as a world-leading expert in the war crime of starvation, associated starvation violations and right to food abuses. With over 15 years' experience in international law, Catriona Murdoch was called to the Bar of England and Wales and is attached to 1 Crown Office Row Chambers in the UK. She joined GRC in 2016 and made partner in 2020. Catriona Murdoch is ranked as a leading practitioner in the UK Chambers and Partners and Legal 500 directories and has been involved in GRC’s DPRK work since 2019. She has extensive international litigation experience before the UN IRMCT, ICC and ICTR courts and tribunals, advising on crimes arising out of the Rwandan Genocide, the Iraq war, and the war in the former Yugoslavia. Catriona Murdoch leads GRC’s Starvation Mobile Justice Team in Ukraine, part of GRC’s dedicated units supporting Ukraine’s Office of the Prosecutor General. This investigation is part of the UK, EU and US-sponsored Atrocity Crimes Advisory Group (ACA).
Moderator
Dr Kateryna Busol
Kateryna Busol is a Ukrainian lawyer specialising in international humanitarian, criminal law, transitional justice, gender and cultural heritage. She is an Associate Professor at the National University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy and a British Academy Research Fellow at the British Institute of International and Comparative Law. Kateryna Busol has worked with the Clooney Foundation for Justice, UN Women, Global Survivors Fund as well as with Global Rights Compliance. She has collaborated with Ukrainian NGOs such as the Ukrainian Helsinki Human Rights Union, Media Initiative for Human Rights and Truth Hounds and advised the Office of the Prosecutor General, the Prosecutor's Office of Crimea and the National School of Judges of Ukraine on armed conflict-related proceedings. Kateryna Busol was a visiting researcher at the Leibniz Institute for East and Southeast European Studies, a fellow at Chatham House and a Visiting Professional at the Office of the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court.