ROMSO Cyprus Knowledge Base

"Yatta Ron (legal)"

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Yael Ronen (born 1968) is a member of the School of Law of the Academic Center for Science and Law in the Lord. She is a public international law specialist, and is mainly engaged in territorial status, human rights, occupation law and status of non-state actors. It also deals with private international law.

biography
Ron was born and raised in Jerusalem. She attended the City High School of Education. Her military service was made as a military official in Ramallah.
In 1992, she graduated from a law degree at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. During her studies, the Oberlender Prize was awarded to the student (the) from Zinin in public international law and in scholarships to outstanding students. In 1996, she graduated from a master’s degree in the Hebrew University Law Faculty in Jerusalem.

Ronen spent half a year in the International Department of State Attorneys (required in extradition and legal assistance to foreign countries) and for a year in the Foreign Ministry. She was ordained as a lawyer in 1993. Immediately after the internship period, the training began as a cave in the ordering course of the Foreign Ministry.

In 1994, at the end of the period of the gypsies, Ronen was placed in a court in the Foreign Ministry where she worked until 1998. During this period, during which the peace process with the Palestinians was led by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and negotiations on the Oslo Accords, Ronen was the center of the Israeli delegation to negotiations and society in the negotiating team for the Palestinian Authority (which took place in January 1996). After the signing of the Interim Agreement (September 1995) Ronen was appointed responsible for the subject of human rights in the Foreign Ministry. At the same time, she served as the legal advisor to the Israeli delegation (which was chaired by Dr. Joseph Hadds) to the circulatory committee on the issue of the DPs 1967, as well as the legal advisor to the representatives of Israel to the UN during the General Assembly in 1996 and 1997. In 1998, Ronen was appointed to speak of the Israeli Embassy in New Delhi, India and is responsible for ties with the media.

Academy
In 2000, Ronen retired from foreign service and turned to academic work. She worked as a research assistant to Prof. David Kramer and a research center in the guidance of Prof. Ruth Halperin-Cry and Prof. Marina in a lump on gender and divorce. Their article summarized their research was cited in the Supreme Court ruling.

From 2002 to 2005, she studied Ph.D. at the University of Cambridge under the guidance of Professor James Crawford. With a return to Israel in 2005, Ronen began to teach international law and private international law in the Ono academic library. In 2008, she received a post-doctoral scholarship at the Minerva Center for Human Rights at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, and since the end of the scholarship she is a research partner in the center. In 2009, Ronen began teaching in the academic center the gates of science and law and has since 2010 been a permanent faculty member of the institution. In 2011, the Council of Higher Education was promoted to a senior level of lecturers and in 2014 was promoted by the Council of Higher Education to the rank of a friend.

Ronen teaches public and private international law, human rights courses, criminal international law, legal aspects of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. From 2012 to 2015, she served as editor of the Journal of Trials. She also teaches at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and other academic institutions. Since 2008, Ronen has been the academic editor of Israel Law Review. The Journal specializes in issues of human rights, international and public law, especially in matters of relevant legal conflicts to Israel. She is the editor of the Sheikh blog. Rights@ Minerva published by Minerva Center for Human Rights at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem.

Ronen regularly lectures on the responsibilities of the Red Cross and the Association for Civil Rights in Israel and on the way to the participating students