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Alexa Koenig

Koenig is the executive director of UC Berkeley’s Human Rights Center and a lecturer-in-residence at UC Berkeley School of Law, where she teaches classes on human rights and international criminal law. Her research and commentary have appeared in such diverse outlets as the Annual Review of Law and Social Science, the International Encyclopedia of the Social and Behavioral Sciences, the Huffington Post, and US News and World Report. She is co-author, with Victor Peskin and Eric Stover, of Hiding in Plain Sight: The Pursuit of War Criminals from Nuremberg to the War on Terror; co-editor of Extreme Punishment: Comparative Studies in Detention, Incarceration, and Solitary Confinement; and a contributor to The Guantánamo Effect: Exposing the Consequences of U.S. Detention and Interrogation Practices.

Prior to her appointment at Berkeley Law, she served as program manager of the Witness to Guantánamo Project. She is currently a member of the Technology Advisory Board of the Office of the Prosecutor at the International Criminal Court, and is often called upon to speak about the role of emerging technologies in human rights practices. Koenig has won numerous honors and awards for her research, including grants from the National Science Foundation and a fellowship with the American Association of University Women. She earned her Ph.D. from UC Berkeley’s Jurisprudence and Social Policy Program, her J.D. magna cum laude with a certificate in intellectual property and cyber law from the University of San Francisco, and her B.A. summa cum laude from the University of California, Los Angeles.