Mark Ellis (lawyer)


Mark Steven Ellis is an international criminal law expert and the executive director of the International Bar Association. Ellis is the current chair of the UN-created Advisory Panel on Matters Relating to Defence Counsel of the Mechanism for International Criminal Tribunals.
From 1989 to 2000, Ellis was Executive Director of the American Bar Association Central European and Eurasian Law Initiative.
From 1999 to 2000, Ellis acted as Legal Advisor to the Independent International Commission on Kosovo, chaired by Justice Richard J. Goldstone, and was appointed by the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe to advise on the creation of Serbia’s War Crimes Tribunal. He was involved with the trial of Saddam Hussein and also acted as legal advisor to the defense team of Nuon Chea at the Cambodian War Crimes Tribunal. In 2013, Ellis was admitted to the List of Assistants to Counsel of the International Criminal Court.
He is a former adjunct professor at Catholic University of America, Columbus School of Law, Washington, DC, and a current adjunct professor at Florida State University College of Law, Tallahassee, Florida.

Background and education

Ellis was born in Washington D.C. He holds a B.S. in Economics and a J.D. from Florida State University. He completed two research grants to the European Union, one at the Institut d’Etudes Europeenes in Brussels, focussing on the law and institutions of the European Union, and the other at the Inter‑University Centre of postgraduate studies in Dubrovnik, in the Comparative Policy Studies Program for Yugoslav‑American Studies. In 2010, Ellis received his PhD in international law from King’s College, London.
Mark Ellis has a twin brother named Scott Ellis, who is s an American stage director, actor, and television director.

Career

Career as attorney

Between 1984 and 1986, Ellis worked as an attorney for Johnson and Associates in Tallahassee where he represented clients on matters dealing with administrative and governmental law, international law, tax law, and trial litigation. From 1988 to 1990, Ellis worked in Washington, D.C. as an attorney at Klayman & Gurley, where he specialised in international trade matters, foreign direct investment and U.S. anti-dumping regulations. He represented the United States Information Agency on three separate programs in Central and Eastern Europe on formulating new investment policies.

Senior Consultant to the Foreign Investment Advisory Service of The World Bank

From 1985 to 2000, Ellis acted as a senior consultant to the Foreign Investment Advisory Service of The World Bank. In that role, he focused on the legal environment for foreign investments in FSFR countries and the Balkans and advised Central and Eastern European governments on their draft investment laws.

Executive Director, American Bar Association Central European and Eurasian Law Initiative

In 1989, Ellis became the first executive director of the American Bar Association Central European and Eurasian Law Initiative, since 2007 part of the American Bar Association Rule of Law Initiative. The initiative was created after the fall of the Berlin Wall, with the purpose of providing international legal technical assistance to countries in Europe and Eurasia. When the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia conducted its first trial, Ellis initiated and oversaw an assistance program for the defence team.
Ellis was later appointed by the tribunal as a member of the Disciplinary Advisory Panel to the Defence Counsel for the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia and International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda. He later became President of the Coalition for International Justice.

Legal Advisor to the Independent International Commission on Kosovo

The Independent International Commission on Kosovo, chaired by Richard Goldstone, was a commission established in August 1999 in the aftermath of the Kosovo War. Ellis joined the commission as a legal advisor and assisted the twelve-member commission in examining key developments prior to, during, and after the Kosovo war, including systematic violations of human rights in the region.
The assessment of the Commission regarding the NATO bombing of Yugoslavia was that it was "illegal but justified." It reasoned that NATO had not been authorized by the UN Security Council, but the intervention was beneficial for the Kosovo population which was at a direct risk from the government crackdowns. However, the commission criticized NATO's Kosovo Force and the United Nations Interim Administration Mission in Kosovo for failing to protect minorities in Kosovo and allowing "reverse ethnic cleansing". The commission stated that the Kosovo Force was reluctant and did not have the capability to prevent violence against ethnic minorities and that the Kosovo Liberation Army and other Albanians ethnically cleansed Kosovo after the international presence was established in Kosovo.

Executive Director of the International Bar Association

In 2000, Ellis became the executive director of the International Bar Association, the largest international organization of bar associations and individual lawyers, comprising 203 bar associations and 80,000 individual members from 194 countries. Since then, the organization has expanded in geographic scope, opening new regional offices in Latin America, Asia, the Middle East, and The Hague.
Under the umbrella of the International Bar Association's Human Rights Institute, Ellis originated the their International Criminal Court Programme in The Hague, to monitor fair trial and defence related issues at the court.
Ellis was also responsible, in partnership with Twanda Mutasah, for the creation of the Southern African Litigation Centre, a joint project of the International Bar Association's Human Rights Institute and the Open Society Initiative for Southern Africa, and focuses on three principal areas: support for human rights cases, advice on constitutional advocacy in the Southern African region, and training in human rights and rule of law issues. It is based in Johannesburg, and operates in Angola, Botswana, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Lesotho, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, Swaziland, Zambia and Zimbabwe.
During the setup of the Iraqi High Tribunal that tried Saddam Hussein, Ellis created an initiative to train and advise the Tribunal's judges and prosecutors, with support from the British Foreign Office.
Ellis conceived and set in motion the International Legal Assistance Consortium, headquartered in Stockholm. ILAC provides initial assessments of what is needed to rebuild workable justice systems in post-conflict countries.
Moreover, Ellis initiated the creation of eyeWitness to Atrocities, a mobile phone application directed at using pictorial evidence of international crimes in a court of law. The eyeWitness project uses social media to document crimes in a secure and verifiable way. It addresses evidentiary challenges to the use of photographic evidence by capturing metadata, including the hash values of photos, videos and audio recordings. The pixel value can be used to verify that footage has not been edited or altered. The information received is reviewed by an expert team, who then seek to ensure that the data is used to prosecute perpetrators of international crimes.

Academic activities

Ellis received two Fulbright scholarships to the Institute of Economics, Zagreb, Croatia.
From 1993 to 1997, Ellis was Adjunct Professor at the Catholic University of America, Columbus School of Law.
In 2010, Ellis was named Adjunct Professor at Florida State University College of Law in Tallahassee, where he co-teaches a course on International human rights law.
In 2015, he delivered the Lauterpacht Lecture at the University of Cambridge and in the same year, delivered the Distinguished Jurist Lecture at McGeorge School of Law. In 2014, he delivered the Klatsky Lecture in Human Rights at Case Western Reserve University School of Law.
Ellis is a member of the Editorial Board of the Hague Journal on the Rule of Law and of the Journal of National Security Law and Policy.

Publications

Ellis has written or edited several books focused on  international criminal law and human rights law, including:
He has also written contributions to books, articles in academic journals, book reviews, and policy papers primarily in the fields of international criminal law and international human rights law, and has published editorials in The New York Times, Washington Post, The London Times and the Huffington Post. Most recently, Ellis published an article on "The Growing Crisis With the International Criminal Court" in JURIST, where he is a guest columnist.
Since 2018, Ellis contributes to Los Angeles Review of Books, were he has published reviews on William Schabas's "The Trial of the Kaiser" and Michael Sfard's "The Wall and the Gate."

Awards

In 1998, Ellis received the American Bar Association’s World Order Under Law Award. In 2010, he was recognized by Lawyer Magazine as one of the top 100 lawyers in the UK.
In October 2014, Ellis received the United States Department of State Recognition of lifelong commitment to the Rule of Law and contributions to international legal reform.
He is a recipient of The Florida State University’s Distinguished Alumni Award and the Faculty Senate Torch Award.
In 2019, Ellis was awarded ILAC Lifetime Membership for his commitment to advancing the rule of law in conflict-affected and fragile countries.
Ellis co-conceived the Stockholm Human Rights Award.

Other activities related to international criminal law and the rule of law

In 2006, Ellis became a member of the Advisory Panel to the Defence Counsel for the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia and the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda.
In 2013, he was admitted to the List of Assistants to Counsel of the International Criminal Court.
He is a member of the Crimes Against Humanity Initiative Advisory Council, a project of the Whitney R. Harris World Law Institute at Washington University School of Law in St. Louis to establish the world’s first treaty on the prevention and punishment of crimes against humanity.