Portrait
Roland Norer studied law at the University of Vienna. 2005 Habilitation. Lectured at the University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Vienna, the University of Vienna, the University of Veterinary Medicine, Vienna, Johannes Kepler University Linz, ETH Zurich and Weihenstephan University of Applied Sciences. 2007 Appointed to the Chair of Public Law and Rural Law at the University of Lucerne. Awarded honorary doctorate (Dr. honoris causa) at the University of Miskolc in 2021. General Delegate of the Comité Européen de Droit Rural (C.E.D.R.). President of the Austrian Society for Agricultural and Environmental Law. Numerous publications on administrative, agricultural and environmental law.
Clotilde Pégorier is Head of Education at the Geneva Academy of International Humanitarian Law and Human Rights. She previously held posts as Lecturer in Law at the University of Essex, and as a research and teaching fellow at the universities of Zurich, Lucerne and Exeter. Her main research interests lie in the fields of human rights and international criminal law. She has published a monograph on Ethnic Cleansing: A Legal Qualification and numerous book chapters and journal articles on topics including genocide denial, hate speech and transitional justice.
Jonas Perrin pursued legal studies at the Universities of Bern and Stockholm. His doctoral dissertation on the protection of indigenous land rights, supervised by Prof. Dr. Sebastian Heselhaus, was undertaken at the Universities of Lucerne and Quito. Following this, he served as legal representative and legal adviser at the Solidarity Network Bern. Since 2022, he has held the position of court clerk to Judge Susanne Bolz in Division IV (Asylum Law) of the Swiss Federal Administrative Court.
Markus Schreiber is Assistant Professor with tenure track for Public law and Blockchain at the Zug Institute for Blockchain Research at the University of Lucerne. His thesis, supervised by Prof. Dr. Sebastian Heselhaus, examines how the law handles technical innovation and was awarded the Professor Walther Hug Prize and the Dissertation Prize of the Lucerne University Association. In his postdoctoral project, he explores the extent to which private property may be used to exercise freedom of expression and assembly, with a focus on the digital sphere.