Robert R. Spano

Not to be confused with Robert Spano.
Robert R. Spano
Born Robert Ragnar Spano
(1972-08-27) August 27, 1972[1]
Reykjavík, Iceland, IS
Residence Strasbourg, France
Nationality Icelandic/Italian
Occupation Judge of the European Court of Human Rights
Spouse(s) Arna Gná Gunnarsdóttir
Children Four children

Robert R. Spano (born 27 August 1972) is an Icelandic/Italian jurist and Judge of the European Court of Human Rights. Before beginning his service at the Court he served provisionally as Parliamentary Ombudsman of Iceland and professor and Dean of the Faculty of Law, University of Iceland, as well as having chaired a number of expert committees during his professional career.

On 25 June 2013, the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe elected Spano a judge of the European Court of Human Rights with respect to Iceland. He received an absolute majority of votes cast by parliamentarians.[2] His nine year term of office began on November 1, 2013. He sits in Section I of the Court.

Early life and Education

Spano was born in Reykjavík on 27 August 1972. He graduated with a Candidatus Juris degree from the University of Iceland in 1997 and a Magister Juris degree in European and Comparative Law from the University of Oxford (University College) on August 5, 2000. At Oxford, Spano was awarded the Clifford Chance Prize (proxime accessit) and the Civil Procedure Prize for his scholastic achievements.

Career

In September 1997, Spano was appointed Deputy District Court Judge in the District Court of Reykjanes. In August 1998 he was employed as a legal adviser in the Office of the Parliamentary Ombudsman of Iceland and was appointed Deputy to the Ombudsman in 2001, serving in that role until 2004. In 2003, the Minister of Justice appointed Spano as Chairman of the Standing Committee of Experts in Criminal Law. In 2006, Spano was awarded the Rector's Prize for Excellence in Teaching. In November 2006, Spano was appointed a full professor of law. In September 2007 he was elected Vice-Dean of the Faculty of Law at the University of Iceland and was subsequently elected Dean of the Faculty, serving in that role from 2010 to 2013.

In 2007, the Prime Minister of Iceland appointed Spano to chair a special commission of experts tasked with investigating human rights abuses in child care institutions from 1947-1992. The commission´s work took five years and produced several reports. In 2010, Spano was elected by the General Assembly of the National Church of Iceland to chair a commission of experts entrusted with investigating the reactions and procedures by the Church when allegations of sexual violence allegedly perpetrated by the Bishop of Iceland surfaced in 1996. The commission published its report in the summer of 2011.

On January 1st, 2009, the Praesidium of Parliament appointed Spano as Parliamentary Ombudsman of Iceland in a provisional capacity. Spano served as Parliamentary Ombudsman until 1 July 2010, but continued to serve as Ombudsman on an ad hoc basis in 2011 and 2012. On July 1st, 2012, Spano was appointed an ad hoc Judge of the EFTA Court in Luxembourg by the ESA/Court Committee. In April 2012, Spano was appointed the Icelandic Delegate to the European Committee on Crime Problems (CDCP) of the Council of Europe (COE). Also, he served as an Independent Expert to the Lanzarote Committee of the COE, set up on the basis of the European Convention on Protection for Children Against Sexual Exploitation and Sexual Abuse. On 1 March 2013, Spano was again appointed Parliamentary Ombudsman on a full-time basis, serving until 1 October 2013.[3]

Having been elected a Judge of the European Court of Human Rights, Judge Spano took up office in Strasbourg on November 1, 2013.

Writings

Judge Spano has written extensively in the fields of human rights law, public law, the interpretation of statutes and criminal procedural law. His scholarship has dealt mainly with the impact of the European Convention of Human Rights on domestic law, especially in relation to articles 3 and 7 of the Convention and article 4 of Protocol No. 7. In his writings on the interpretation of statutes, Spano has argued for a normative theory of textualism that views the interpretive enterprise holistically in terms of assessing the internal and external context of the statutory text. Furthermore, he has analysed the conceptual elements of the teleological (purposive) form of statutory interpretation.

Upon assuming office in Strasbourg, Judge Spano has given lectures and published articles on the work of the European Court of Human Rights, in particular on the relationship of the Court and national courts, arguing that the Strasbourg Court is entering an "Age of Subsidiarity".

Personal life

Judge Spano speaks Icelandic, English, Italian, French and Danish. He is married to Icelandic artist and teacher Arna Gná Gunnarsdóttir. They have four children.

See also

References

External links

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