Hanna Malik
 Dr. iur. LL.M.

    • Docent
    • University Lecturer
    Laws (Faculty of Law)


hanna.malik@utu.fi

Caloniankuja 3

Turku


ORCID identifierhttps://orcid.org/0000-0003-1973-1199





Areas of expertise
comparative law; criminal law; law and society; law-making; corporate crimes; social harms, corporate criminal liability; alternative approaches to regulation, critical algorithm studies, labor exploitation; labor movements

Biography



My background is in criminal law and comparative law. I hold a Master
degree in Law from the University of Lodz (Poland), a Master degree in
International Relations- German studies from the University of Lodz (Poland)
and a Master of Laws degree (LL.M) from the Johann Wolfgang Goethe University
in Frankfurt am Main (Germany). In January 2020, I defended my Ph.D. thesis
entitled “Liability of collective entities in Poland in the view of the German
long-standing debate on corporate criminal liability”, at the European
University Viadrina - Center for Interdisciplinary Polish Studies - in
Frankfurt an der Oder (Germany).






Since December 2016 I have been working as a senior and project researcher
at the Faculty of Law, University of Turku. Since 2019, I am affiliated with
Tel Aviv University, as visiting researcher in the ERC research project
TraffLab: Labor Perspective to Human Trafficking. Currently, at UTU I am funded
by the Academy of Finland, for a research project focused on ‘Algorithmic
Agencies and Law (AALAW) and the research consortium Ethical Use of AI’ (Etairos).



Research





My research interests lie at the intersection of comparative criminal law,
sociology of law, dialectics of law-making, corporate crimes and social harm. I
am especially interested in the regulation of corporate power and in the
challenges it poses to traditional criminal law approaches. In my dissertation,
I revisit the dilemma of corporate criminal liability as a regulatory response
to corporate wrongdoing.





In Turku, I have been active in several comparative projects, including the
research project on the alternative, non-penal approaches to tackle serious and
organized crime as well as my individual research project founded by the
Scandinavian Research Council for Criminology (NSfK) “The Formation of Labor
Exploitation – Polish Workers in in Finland, Norway, and Sweden.” In this
project, I examine the misuse of labor rights in a broader context of
state-corporate crime scholarship.





In the framework of AALAW and Etairos, I expand both my doctoral research
on regulated self-regulation and my general research interest in social harms
enabled and facilitated in the state-corporate context.



Teaching

Teacher:

Introduction to comparative legal research

Comparative legal research

Tutor:

Corporate Crime, Law and Power



Publications
  
Go to first page
  
Go to previous page
  
2 of 2
  
Go to next page
  
Go to last page


Last updated on 2023-12-07 at 11:54