Anne-Michelle Slater Anne-Michelle Slater is a Professor of Planning and Environmental Law at the University of Aberdeen, Scotland, UK.
Querying into Data in Asylum Decisionmaking, Authors: William Hamilton Byrne, Thomas Gammeltoft Hansen and Henrik Palmer Olsen This research reveals the full extent of interconnections and entanglement of the European Court of Human Rights’ migration jurisprudence, using cutting-edge legal research technology of citation network analysis.
Free movement? New Centre of Excellence examines global mobility rights A new national Centre of Excellence in law will examine the complex legal structures that govern how we, as humans, move or are prevented from moving across national borders and parts of the world. The new centre will…
Marlene Wind appointed as Special Advisor to the EU Foreign Minister Professor Marlene Wind will in the future be the Special Advisor to Josep Borrell Fontelles, High Representative of the European Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy, also known as the EU's Foreign Minister.
New project maps illegal mining and global environmental crime With a grant from the Independent Research Fund Denmark, researchers from the UCPH will study how minerals are irregularly mined in Ghana and end up in technological products, only to return and dumped as e-waste.
Querying into Data in Asylum Decision-making, Author: Trine Rask Nielsen In this blogpost examples are given from the DATA4ALL project on the weekly ‘data crunching’ sessions. The sessions have been set up as an important step towards querying into data from asylum cases.
Mapping the Danish asylum procedure, Author: Anna Høgenhaug This blog post examines the approach to refugee status determination in Denmark, giving the reader a visual overview of the entire process, step-by-step.
Testing out NLP on the public Danish asylum database, Author: Panagiota Katsikouli In this blogpost examples are given of information that has been extracted from decisions of the Refugee Appeals Board using natural language processing (NLP).
Politicians condition the influence of the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) EU politicians have decisive influence on the broader impact of the Court’s jurisprudence. That is the conclusion by Professor Dorte Sindbjerg Martinsen, who is one of the first to analyse the judicial influence on EU…