uWIN - University Continuing Education intensive

Humanitarian Action in Armed Conflict: Law, Principles, Practice - Unit 2

Unit 2 explores the use of technology, including AI, in armed conflict, the challenges of arranging humanitarian access, and the provision of water, sanitation and hygiene facilities in armed conflict.

In cooperation with: 

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Special offer for the complete package:

If you book Unit 1 and Unit 2, the cost of Unit 2 is reduced to just 495 €.

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Info

Certificate
Certificate of Attendance
from the University of Innsbruck and the Austrian Red Cross

Duration
1.5 days

Dates
Fri, Jan. 15, 2027 | 2:00 p.m. – 7:30 p.m.
Sat, Jan. 16, 2027 | 9:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.

Language of instruction
English

Cost
550 € incl. catering | lunch
275 € for students (up to the age of 30)

The right uWIN for me?

Abschlussmütze

Qualification profile

Participants will have an understanding of:

  • the legal challenges and ethical dilemmas posed by the use of new technologies in armed conflicts;
  • the rules governing humanitarian access, including under occupation, during sieges or blockades;
  • the prohibition on attacks on civilian infrastructure and use of starvation as a method of warfare,
  • the operational challenges of delivering humanitarian relief, and providing water, sanitation and hygiene facilities in armed conflict.

These competencies provide a foundation for professional pathways in humanitarian field work and programme management, legal advising and compliance, diplomacy and policy, civil-military cooperation, conflict reporting, and IHL dissemination, but also for graduate study in Peace and Conflict Studies, international law and related fields. The course also offers direct exchange and networking with experienced practitioners from the Austrian Red Cross, Doctors without Borders and the Austrian Ministry of Foreign Affairs (BMEIA).

Menschengruppe

Target Group

This course is for anyone seeking a practical understanding of humanitarian action in armed conflict. No legal background is required. It is especially relevant for:

  • Humanitarian & Development: NGO/Red Cross staff, volunteers, emergency managers, Development Studies students
  • Law & Human Rights: law, human rights and refugee protection professionals and students
  • Governance & Diplomacy: government, policy, diplomacy, political science and IR professionals
  • Security & Defense: military, civilian protection and security personnel
  • Health, Media, Tech & Education: health professionals, journalists, AI policy experts, educators, and career changers entering the humanitarian sector
  • Career changers: considering a move into the humanitarian sector
Zertifikat

Requirements

  • Good working knowledge of English
Briefumschlag

Contact

Mag.a Daniela Gruber

Division for continuing education
Karl-Schönherr-Straße 3
6020 Innsbruck

+43 512 507-39407

weiterbildung@uibk.ac.at


Portrait einer Person

Univ.-Prof. Dr. Andreas Oberprantacher, MA

is Professor of Practical Philosophy at the University of Innsbruck, where he heads the Unit for Peace and Conflict Studies and serves as Academic Coordinator of the MA Programme Peace and Conflict Studies. His research and teaching move at the intersection of political philosophy and Critical Peace and Conflict Studies, with a focus on contested citizenship, displacement, and the changing character of violence and war, including recent work on the security industry and algorithmic warfare. He has taught and lectured widely internationally, including in regions affected by armed conflict.

Portrait einer Person

Univ.-Prof. Dr. Andreas Oberprantacher, MA

is Professor of Practical Philosophy at the University of Innsbruck, where he heads the Unit for Peace and Conflict Studies and serves as Academic Coordinator of the MA Programme Peace and Conflict Studies. His research and teaching move at the intersection of political philosophy and Critical Peace and Conflict Studies, with a focus on contested citizenship, displacement, and the changing character of violence and war, including recent work on the security industry and algorithmic warfare. He has taught and lectured widely internationally, including in regions affected by armed conflict.

Portrait einer Person

Lisa Macheiner

has extensive experience working as Emergency Project Coordinator on medical and psychosocial projects with humanitarian organisations, including in Libya, Yemen, Iraq, Afghanistan, Jordan and, most recently, as Project Coordinator for Doctors without Borders in Gaza. Lisa holds a Master of Advanced Studies in International Law in Armed Conflict from the University of Geneva and a Bachelor of Arts in Political Science from the University of Innsbruck.

Portrait einer Person

Univ.-Prof. Dr. Matthias Christoph Kettemann, LLM

is Professor of Innovation, Theory and Philosophy of Law at the University of Innsbruck and head of the Institute for Theory and Future of Law. A scholar of international law, he studied law in Graz, Geneva and – as a Fulbright and Boas scholar – at Harvard Law School, and holds the venia for international law, internet law and legal theory. He also leads research programmes at the Leibniz Institute for Media Research | Hans-Bredow-Institut in Hamburg and the Humboldt Institute for Internet and Society in Berlin, and his current research addresses the regulation of artificial intelligence and the protection of human rights in digital contexts –questions of direct relevance to the future of International Humanitarian Law.

Portrait einer Person

Natali Gbele

is a PhD candidate and research assistant at the Chair of International and Public Law at the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich under the supervision of Prof. Dr. Christian Walter. Her PhD research focuses on the opacity of AI Decision Support Systems and the principle of distinction under international humanitarian law. Her research interests include emerging technologies in warfare and legal developments relating to Palestine.

Portrait einer Person

Ruth Doyle

is a legal professional with over two decades’ experience working in international institutions, now specialising in Public International Law and International Humanitarian Law (IHL). As Vice-Chair of the Austrian Red Cross, Innsbruck, she aims to bridge the gap between legal theory and practical humanitarian action through education. Ruth holds a law degree from Trinity College Dublin and is currently an LL.M. Candidate in Public International Law. Her research focuses on State responsibility in two areas: the obligation to cooperate with International Criminal Court arrest warrants, and the obligation under the Geneva Conventions to disseminate and promote IHL.

Portrait einer Person

Jürgen Högl

is Head of Department for Disaster and Crisis Management at the Austrian Red Cross. Jürgen has co-ordinated numerous international missions in disaster and crisis affected regions for Red Cross Red Crescent Movement, such as Ukraine, Lebanon, and Armenia. In 2025, Jürgen was Operations Manager in Egypt, where he co-ordinated the provision of humanitarian assistance to the Gaza Strip and Sudanese refugees in Egypt. Jürgen`s expertise encompasses operational planning, the coordination of emergency operations, and crisis management under volatile security conditions.

Portrait einer Person

Christopher Friedrich

is working with the Austrian Red Cross as “Standing Surge” Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH) Coordinator, deploying to disaster and crisis situations. He brings over 15 years of engagement with the Emergency Response Unit for WASH. He deployed to Syria, Gaza, Bangladesh, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Jamaica, and many other contexts, leading assessments, coordinating WASH responses, facilitating trainings, and supporting partners with technical advice on the ground.

Dates
Fri, Jan. 15, 2027 | 2:00 p.m. – 7:30 p.m.
Sat, Jan. 16, 2027 | 9:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.

Location
Grauer Bär on the Sowi Campus
Seminar Room EG003
Universitätsstraße 5–7
6020 Innsbruck

Catering
Lunch provided

Content
Friday 15 January 2027:

  • Welcome & Overview of Course
  • International Humanitarian Law: New technologies
  • International Humanitarian Law: AI
  • International Humanitarian Law: Seminar

Saturday 16 January 2027:

  • International Humanitarian Law: Humanitarian Access
  • International Humanitarian Law: Protection of Civilian Infrastructure
  • Humanitarian Action: Case Study
  • Humanitarian Action: WASH
  • Humanitarian Action: Panel Discussion
  • Closing Words & Award of Certificates of Attendance (5:00 p.m. - 6:00 p.m.)


Registration
General information about uWIN – intensive university continuing education registration applies

Participants are responsible for any insurance (health, accident and liability insurance).

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