Researcher Profile
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Lecturer at Adelaide Law School
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Protective capacity of law, international law, responsibility to protect, civil wars, atrocity crimes, human rights, arms trade, space mining, space governance, space activities, information operations, economic sanctions, lawfare
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International law, international humanitarian law, use of force, international space law, responsibility to protect, atrocity crimes, economic sanctions, Arms Trade Treaty
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‘Arms Control and Space Security’ in Kai-Uwe Schrogl et al (eds), Handbook of Space Security: Policies, Applications and Programs (2nd ed, 2021, Springer) doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-22786-9_135-1
‘Humanitarian Intervention and R2P’ (2020) 22 Journal of International Peacekeeping 325
‘The Evolution of the Principle of Non-Intervention? R2P and Overt Assistance to Opposition Groups’ (2019) 11(4) Global Responsibility to Protect 365
‘The Arms Trade Treaty: Responsibility to Protect in Action?’ (2017) 9(2) Global Responsibility to Protect 147
‘Intelligence Collection in Naval Armed Conflicts’ in Dale Stephens and Matthew Stubbs (eds), The Law of Naval Warfare (2019, LexisNexis) (with Vicki McConachie)
Melissa de Zwart and Stacey Henderson (eds), Commercial and Military Uses of Outer Space (2021, Springer)
‘On the legality of Mars colonisation’ (2019) 40(3) Adelaide Law Review 841 (with Joshua Fitzmaurice)
‘R2P and the expansion of measures less than force’ in Vasilka Sancin and Maša Kovič Dine (eds), Responsibility to Protect in Theory and Practice (Ljubljana: GV Založba, 2015)
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Disinformation And Social Cohesion; Radicalisation And Extremism; Insider Threats; The Changing Character Of Competition And Conflict In The Indo-Pacific; Social, Cognitive, Ethical and Legal Aspects Of Big Data And AIML
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Twitter Handle @DrSHenderson1
Email Address stacey.henderson@adelaide.edu.au
Stacey Henderson
Overview
Dr Stacey Henderson's research focuses on the protective capacity of law, including international law generally, responsibility of States and governance of outer space and space technology. Her current research focuses on the international community's responsibility to protect (R2P) populations from atrocity crimes and on space law, particularly commercial space activities and sustained human presence in space.