Between 1998 and 2002, she
participated in the
investigation into events in
Srebrenica that was
conducted by the Dutch
Institute for War
Documentation (NIOD) and
commissioned by the Dutch
Government. From 2000 to
2012, she worked as a
Researcher on the Leadership
Research Team in the Office
of Prosecutor (OTP) at the
International Criminal
Tribunal for the Former
Yugoslavia (ICTY), where she
was principle researcher on
history and politics in the
trial of Slobodan Milošević.
Her primary focus was to
uncover and clarify the plan
undertaken by Serbian
leadership and criminality
related to its
implementation, as charged
by the OTP. She also worked
on other key cases, most
notably that of Radovan
Karadžić. Tromp received her
PhD from the University of
Amsterdam’s Centre for War,
Holocaust and Genocide
Studies in spring 2015. She
is the co-founder and
Executive Director of the
Geoffrey Nice Foundation on
Law, History, Politics, and
Society in the Context of
Mass Atrocities, which
supports and provides
cross-national educational
opportunities for students,
researchers, and academics
in the field of
International Criminal
Justice.
Books
Prosecuting Slobodan
Milošević: The Unfinished
Trial, (Routledge
Publishers, 2016).
Joegoslavië, het land dat
niet meer bestaat, (Lochum,
1997).
Book chapters
“Criminal Trials as a Tool
to Control Historical
Narrative,” co-authored with
Geoffrey Nice, in Margaret
deGuzman and Diane Amann
(eds.), Arcs of Global
Justice; Essays in Honor of
William A. Schabas, (Oxford
University Press, 2017).
FORTHCOMING
“Criminal Trials as a Tool
to Re-Write the History” in
Hikmet Karčić’s Remembering
the Bosnian Genocide,
(Institute for Islamic
Tradition of Bosniaks,
2016).
“UN and BiH” co-authored
with Sir Geoffrey Nice, in
The UN Security Council in
the Age of Human Rights,
Jared Genser and Bruno
Stagno Uarte (eds.),
(Cambridge University Press,
2014).
“Understanding the Milošević
Case: Legacy of an Unfinshed
Trial” in The Genocide
Convention: The Legacy of 60
Years, H.G. van der Wilt, J.
Vervliet, G.K. Sluiter,
J.Th,M. Houwink ten Cate
(eds.), (Marinus Nijhoff,
Leiden, 2012), pp. 27-39.
Background of the Yugoslav
Crisis: A review of the
literature
Annex VI in Srebrenica – a
’safe’ area, NIOD (De Boom:
Amsterdam, 2002).
http://213.222.3.5/srebrenica/
“Slovenia” in Legal Culture
in Five Central European
Countries, E. Blankenburg
(ed.), (Wetenschapelijke
Regeringsraad – WRR: The
Hague, 2000).
“Kroatië” in Nieuwe tijden -
Oost- en Midden Europese
landen na de val van het
communisme; H. Renner, M.
van den Heuvel, H. Van der
Meulen, (eds.) Metz;
Amsterdam 1997.
“Slovenië’ in Nieuwe tijden
- Oost- en Midden Europese
landen na de val van het
communisme; H. Renner, M.
van den Heuvel, H. Van der
Meulen, (eds.), (Metz;
Amsterdam 1997).
“Kosovo and Disintegration
of Yugoslavia” in G.
Duijzings, D. Janjić and
Sh.Maliqi (eds.), Kosovo -
Kosova. Confrontation or
coexistence, Nijmegen, 1997.
“Stereotypes about War in
Yugoslavia” in Vampires
Unstaked; A. Gerrits and N
Adler (eds.), (KNAW ‘
Koninklijke Nederlandse
Akademie voor Wetenschapen,
Amsterdam, 1995).
Articles:
“A Troubled Relationship:
the ICTY and Post-conflict
Reconciliation” in Yearbook
of the Austrian National
Army Academy,
(Reichenau-Austria, 2013).
“ICTY – an Institutionalized
Legal Response to Mass
Atrocities”
Yearbook of the Austrian
National Army Academy,
(Reichenau-Austria, 2011).
“Slovenië in het
post-communistisch
tijdperk,” Internationale
Spectator (February 1995).
“De rol van Kosovo-mythe in
de Servische geschiedenis,”
Kleio, 35/6. August 1994.
“Tudjman’s Kroatië”,
Oost-Europa Verkenningen,
April 1993.
“Burgeroorlog in Joegoslavië
- een analyse van bewuste
escalaties en tragische
fouten,” Transaktie, June,
l992, pp. 116-133.
“Servo-Kroatische
woordenstrijd,” Oosteuropa
Verkenningen, l992, nr.123,
pp. 18-40
“Kosovo: de volgende
brandhaard?” Internationale
Spectator, l992, 46/12,
pp.703-710.
Themes:
The 1990s Wars,
The Region after 2000
Texts:
The Slobodan Milošević Trial as a Valuable Historical Source for a Better Understanding of the Disintegration of the SFRY
In Search for Truth at Mass Atrocities Trials: Will Judges and Lawyers Have the Last Word? |