List of Danish candidates for the position of Judge at the European Court of Human Rights and description of national selection procedure
With reference to your letter of 29 November 2021, the Government of Denmark (hereinafter the “government”) respectfully submits the following candidates for election as judge at the European Court of Human Rights:
The government observes that the list above is arranged in alphabetical order by surname, and the list is therefore not prioritised.
The curricula vitae for each of the candidates and the procedure by which the candidates were selected have been examined by the Advisory Panel of Experts on Candidates for Election as Judge to the European Court of Human Rights. […]
The curricula vitae in English and French are attached to this letter as appendices 1 to 3.
By letter dated 10 December 2021 a request was submitted to the government by the Chair of the Advisory Panel of Experts on Candidates for Election as Judge to the European Court of Human Rights for the submission of the names and curricula vitae of the candidates, together with information on the procedure by which the candidates were selected. The government was requested to provide the information to the Advisory Panel no later than 25 May 2022.
The members of the committee are the following:
The committee’s task is to evaluate the qualifications of applicants to the positions as Danish judge at the European Court of Human Rights, Danish judge at the Court of Justice of the European Union, Danish judge at the General Court of the European Union, and Danish Advocate General at the Court of Justice of the European Union. On the basis of this evaluation, the committee nominates the best candidates to the government. The Ministry of Justice serves as the secretariat of the Committee.
The notice included information on the requirements for qualification as judge at the European Court of Human Rights, including linguistic competences, as well as relevant information about the application process. In the notice persons, who wished to be nominated as candidates for the position as judge at the European Court of Human Rights, were invited to submit to the Ministry of Justice their applications no later than 9 March 2022. All interested persons, regardless of personal background, were encouraged to apply. Applicants were invited to upload their applications electronically.
In total, eleven potential female candidates were approached by phone. The women, who were approached, are either judges at the highest courts in Denmark or possess qualifications for appointment to the highest judicial offices.
Despite the above-mentioned steps taken by the Ministry of Justice and the committee, the ministry only received applications from male candidates.
The committee summoned four out of five applicants to interviews on 4 May 2022. On that basis, and after assessing the qualifications of the applicants, the committee nominated the three above-mentioned candidates to the government. On 24 May 2022 the government accepted the Committee’s nomination.
On 25 May 2022 the government transmitted the names and the English versions of the curricula vitae of the three candidates, together with information on the procedure by which the candidates were selected, to the Advisory Panel of Experts on Candidates for election as Judge to the European Court of Human Rights. The French translations of the curricula vitae were sent to the Advisory Panel on 13 June 2022.
[…]
Firstly, eleven potential female candidates were approached by the highest officials in the Ministry of Justice, by the chairman of the independent standing Committee, who is a Danish Supreme Court Judge, and by a judge at the Danish Eastern High Court, who is also a member of the Committee. Although, the Ministry of Justice only received applications from male candidates.
Secondly, the notice has been published with an application deadline of four weeks in both rounds of applications, and according to the government the deadline has therefore been sufficiently long.
Thirdly, it is the government’s view that the notice for the position as judge at the European Court of Human Rights has been published very widely, and on websites (www.jobunivers.dk and www.jobnet.dk) where a broad variety of lawyers commonly see vacant positions. The government observes that these two websites are fora where lawyers – whether working in i.a. private companies, in the government, for NGO’s or as professors at universities – commonly see vacant positions. This is also illustrated by the fact that the government received an application for the position as judge at the European Court of Human Rights from a male legal professor.
Furthermore, the government notes that it has not previously experienced difficulties with receiving applications from female candidates when publishing international judicial positions at these two major websites (www.jobunivers.dk and www.jobnet.dk). As an example, the position as Advocate General at the Court of Justice of the European Union was also published on these two websites, and the government received during this process applications from a number of potential female candidates.
Against this background, it is the government’s view […] that there are “exceptional circumstances” in this case which justifies a derogation from the general rule that the list should contain at least one candidate of each sex. Therefore, the government respectfully requests that the list is accepted.
Name, forename: Ahsan, Mohammad
Sex: Male
Date and place of birth: 25 December 1970, Gujrat, Pakistan
Nationality: Danish
1998: Master of Law, University of Copenhagen, Denmark
None.
No public office posts, elected posts or posts held in a political party or movement.
Reference is made to the information above.
I have written the following articles on human rights issues:
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*I do not write French and only speak very little French.
I confirm my intention concerning the French language.
None.
I confirm that, if elected a judge on the Court, I will take up permanent residence in Strasbourg.
Name, forename: Hvam, Jon Esben
Sex: Male
Date and place of birth: 22 December 1972 in Aarhus, Denmark (49 years old)
Nationality: Danish
Family status: Married to Mrs Herborg Kråkevik, Norwegian actress and singer, two daughters Agnes (18) and Petra (12)
Law Degree from Aarhus University in 1998
Admitted to the Danish Bar in 2010
As of 2015: High Court Judge at the Danish Western High Court
2014: Judge at the District Court of Holstebro, Jutland
2013: Acting High Court Judge of the Danish Western High Court
2006-2009: Assistant judge at the Supreme Court
2007-2009: Assistant judge at the Danish Labour Court (subsidiary occupation)
August 2011-2012: Senior Legal and Human Rights Advisor at the International Law and Policy Institute in Oslo, Norway
Main tasks: Provision of advice and conducting legal reviews/analysis for various international institutions, UN organisations and Norwegian ministries on Public International Law, Human Rights Law and Justice Sector Reform
2010-July 2011: Attorney-at-law at the Danish law firm Nielsen Nørager in Copenhagen
Main tasks: Provision of advice to and carrying out legal proceedings on behalf of private clients and public institutions in the areas of contract law, insolvency law, company law and tort law
1998-2001 and 2003-2006: Civil Servant at the Danish Ministry of Justice
Doing service in the Office of Naturalisation (1998-1999), Office of Personnel (1999-2001), Office of Procedural Law (2003-2004), and Office of Constitutional Law (2004-2006)
Main tasks: Preparation of law drafts, providing legal advice to other ministries, case handling and administrative tasks
Part-time prosecutor for the Copenhagen Police Commissioner (1999-2001) and the Zealand State Attorney (2004-2006)
2018: Chairman of the Board of Viborg Cathedral School (High School and Boarding School with approximately 1 150 Danish and international students)
August 2011-2012: Senior Legal and Human Rights Adviser at the International Law and Policy Institute in Oslo, Norway
Main tasks: Provision of advice and conducting legal reviews/analysis for various international institutions, UN organisations and Norwegian ministries on Public International Law, Human Rights Law and Justice Sector Reform.
2001-2003: Human Rights and Legal Advisor to the Danish Human Rights Institute working as an adviser to the Cambodian Government and as the local representative of the institute in Cambodia.
Main tasks: Supporting the elaboration of a plan for reform of the Legal and Judicial sector in Cambodia with the point of departure in the Cambodian Constitution and International Human Rights Conventions ratified by Cambodia. Facilitation of the co-operation between the Cambodian Government and UN organisations present in Cambodia, the World Bank, various embassies and local NGOs on legal and judicial reform in Cambodia.
2003-2011: Part-time consultancies for the Danish Institute for Human Rights in the area of Human Rights Law and implementation of the Rule of Law and Due Process in Serbia, Yemen and Cambodia.
1999-2008: Part-time senior lecturer at the Faculty of Law at the University of Copenhagen on the subject “Danish Constitutional Law and Human Rights Law”.
2005-2007: Part-time senior lecturer at the Faculty of Law at the University of Copenhagen on the subject “The Practice of the European Court of Human Rights” (with teaching and examinations conducted in English).
1999-2001: Part-time lecturer at the Faculty of Law at the University of Copenhagen on the subject “Public International Law”.
As of 2019: Chairman of the Danish Disciplinary Court for Surveyors (public committee, which according to law is presided over by a High Court Judge)
As of 2019: Deputy Chairman of the Danish Appeals Permission Board within the section of family law (granting permissions to appeal judgments/decisions of the District Courts to the High Courts)
2016-2018: Chairman of the Danish Consumer Complaints Board (public committee, which according to law is presided over by a High Court Judge)
Legal and financial support to the Prey Lang Community Network, a project aiming to protect the Prey Lang forest in Cambodia, the largest evergreen forest on the Indochinese peninsula.
Elaboration of compilations of teaching material on the subject “Danish Constitutional Law and Human Rights Law” during my 9 years as part-time senior lecturer at the University of Copenhagen.
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I have begun taking private classes in French in March 2022 and will continue to do so. I intend to continue learning French and also to work on fine-tuning my Legal English.
None.
I will take up permanent residence in Strasbourg if elected a judge. My wife and younger daughter will be prepared to move to Strasbourg with me.
Name, forename: Trabjerg, Ib Hounsgaard
Sex: Male
Date and place of birth: 28June 1970, Husby, Denmark
Nationality: Danish
Family status: Married, two children (14 and 19 years old)
1989: High School Diploma, Ringkøbing Gymnasium.
1996: Law graduate, University of Aarhus.
November 2001 – April 2002: Deputy judge, City Court of Køge (now City Court of Roskilde)
March 2008 – December 2008: High court judge (ad interim), Danish Eastern High Court
December 2009 – December 2014: City court judge, Court of Lyngby
As of January 2015: High court judge, Danish Eastern High Court
April 2011 – December 2014: Chairman, The Nature Preservation Board of Copenhagen (appointed by the Ministry of Environment)
March 2016 – September 2021: Vice chairman of the Danish Refugee Appeals Board, Ministry of Immigration and Integration (appointed by the presidency of the board)
As of October 2021: Chairman of the Danish Refugee Appeals Board, Ministry of Immigration and Integration (appointed by the presidency of the board)
On ad hoc basis I have in recent years also concluded a number of arbitration cases primarily within the framework of the Danish Institute of Arbitration
I am nominated by the Ministry of Taxation on the list of independent persons according to the provisions of the Convention of 23 July 1990 on the elimination of double taxation in connection with the adjustment of profits of associated enterprises (the Arbitration Convention) and article 9 of Council Directive (EU) 2017/1852 of 10 October 2017 on tax dispute resolution mechanisms in the European Union.
February 1996 – April 1999: Head of section, Ministry of Justice (Court Administration Department and Civil and Police Department)
May 1999 – January 2001: Head of section, Danish Parliamentary Ombudsman
February 2001 – October 2001: Head of section, Ministry of Justice (Civil and Police Department)
May 2002 – July 2005: Head of section, Ministry of Justice (Civil and Police Department and Law Department)
August 2005 – February 2008: Legal adviser, Ministry of Justice (Law Department)
January 2009 – November 2009: Legal adviser, Ministry of Justice (Law Department)
April 1998 – December 1999: Teaching assistant (correction of dissertations), Administrative Law, University of Aarhus
February 2000 – August 2005: Teaching assistant, International Law, University of Copenhagen
February 2005 – August 2005: External lecturer (substitute), Inheritance Law (“Privat Generationsskifte”), University of Copenhagen
February 2010 – January 2016: External lecturer, Civil Procedural Law, University of Copenhagen (various periods)
January 2012 – June 2012 (during the Danish EU Presidency): Chairman of a Council Working Group dealing with general questions concerning civil law and a Council Working Group dealing with the negotiations on a proposal for a regulation concerning protection measures in civil matters (appointed by the Ministry of Justice)
2015 – 2016: Chairman of the Working Group on combat sports (appointed by the Ministry of Justice)
January 2016 – November 2021: Editor (court decisions), Journal of Family and Inheritance Law (Karnov Group)
As part of my employment as head of section in the Ministry of Justice I have in various periods also worked as a part time deputy judge and a part time prosecutor, and I have been a member (deputy) of an administrative appeal board dealing with unemployment benefits etc. (Arbejdsmarkedets Ankenævn).
None.
I have extensive practical experience in the field of human rights working as a city court judge and later as a high court judge dealing with both civil and criminal cases within the ordinary court system of Denmark.
As vice chairman and now chairman of the Danish Refugee Appeals Board, which has the final decision-making power in asylum cases, I also deal with human rights issues on a day-to-day basis.
None.
None.
None.
None.
I am a co-author of three works within the fields of Family Law, Probate Law and Inheritance Law and have also contributed to a few articles primarily on these topics. I have also on ad hoc basis had educational activities. The main publications are:
Co-author: Ægtefælleloven med kommentarer (The Danish Act on Matrimonial Property Regimes with commentaries), Anne Louise Bormann, Johan Hartmann Stæger and Ib Hounsgaard Trabjerg (1st edition, 2019).
Co-author: Arveloven med kommentarer (The Danish Inheritance Act with commentaries), Anne Louise Bormann and Ib Hounsgaard Trabjerg (2nd edition, 2017).
Co-author: Dødsboskifte (Administration of estates of deceased persons), Anne Louise Bormann, Finn Taksøe Jensen and Ib Hounsgaard Trabjerg (currently 2nd edition 2012, 3rd edition expected 2022).
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I confirm the above statement.
None.
I confirm the above statement.