Jana Lozanoska

Jana Lozanoska

Jana Lozanoska teaches human rights and international law.

She has obtained her doctorate degree from the United Nations University for Peace in San Jose, Costa Rica with focus on Hannah Arendt’s political theory and principle of human dignity as rethinking of human rights. She holds an LL.M degree in international humanitarian law from the University of Geneva and Graduate Institute for International Studies, Switzerland. Her research interests are at the intersection of human rights, international criminal law, visuality, and technology. Currently, she is working on research related to X-rays as evidence in front of the International Criminal Court by examining their nature as court evidence on the one hand and as evidence in art-exhibitions on the other hand, in formulating phenomenological aesthetics of X-rays. She has published several manuscripts regarding the interrelation between justice, technology, and temporality. As a lawyer she has submitted several initiatives in front of the Constitutional Court and the Ombudsman in addressing human rights, respect, and protection. Lozanoska also has contributed to the first NGO report to the Human Rights Council Universal Periodic Review, worked for the Maldives Mission at UNOG during the establishment of the Human Rights Council. She has written in several daily newspapers as columnist and frequently published on Res Publica, she has published two poetry books and one short novel “Living Room” that deals with the interaction between painting, photography, politics of identity, and neuroscience, and has been shortlisted for the best novel prize (Utrinski Vesnik) in 2015.