Mark J. Osiel

Mark J. Osiel

Professor of Law, Aliber Family Chair, College of Law, University of Iowa

Mark Osiel's writings have inspired scholarly conferences and are assigned at many leading universities throughout the world, in a number of fields. His works seek to show how we may improve the law’s responses to mass atrocity by better understanding its organizational forms and social dynamics. His books include Mass Atrocity, Collective Memory & the Law (1997), Obeying Orders: Atrocity, Military Discipline, and the Law of War (1999), Mass Atrocity, Ordinary Evil, and Hannah Arendt: Criminal Consciousness in Argentina's Dirty War (Yale Univ. Press, 2002), Making Sense of Mass Atrocity (Cambridge Univ. Press, 2009), The End of Reciprocity: Terror, Torture & the Law of War (Cambridge Univ. Press, 2009); The Right to Do Wrong: A Social Scientific Look at Law’s Relation to Morality (Harvard Univ. Press, forthcoming), and After Atrocity: New Approaches to the Restraint and Redress of Mass Killing (Cambridge Univ. Press, forthcoming). His articles have appeared in the Harvard Law Review, Columbia Law Review, California Law Review, Pennsylvania Law Review, Journal of Legal Analysis, Human Rights Quarterly, Law & Social Inquiry, Ethics & International Affairs, Dissent, and Representations, among others.

Professor Osiel has served as consultant in several, high-profile international trials and advised the Department of Defense on recent anti-terrorism prosecutions. He regularly addresses international organizations and governments in post-conflict societies on issues of transitional justice. He was Director for International Criminal and Humanitarian Law at the T.M.C. Asser Institute, in The Hague, and is an occasional media commentator on legal aspects of contemporary armed conflicts.

Osiel has been a visiting fellow at Cambridge University, Harvard's Kennedy School of Government, the London School of Economics, the American Bar Foundation/Northwestern, as well as universities in Argentina, Brazil, France, The Netherlands, and India (as a Fulbright Lecturer). After accepting a clerkship on the US Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit, Prof. Osiel practiced civil litigation for two years at Foley Hoag, a large private law firm in Boston. Before attending law school, he worked as a Head Start counselor and as a paramedic in Guatemala. Avocationally, he is an avid enthusiast of foreign film.

After accepting a clerkship on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit, Prof. Osiel practiced for two years at Foley, Hoag & Eliot, a large private law firm in Boston. Before law school, he worked as a Head Start counselor and as a paramedic in Guatemala. Avocationally, he is an avid enthusiast of foreign film.

Faculty Fellow