Mission
The Geneva Centre on Knowledge Governance is a project of American University’s Program on Information Justice and Intellectual Property and the Geneva Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies. The mission of the Centre is to promote justice and sustainable development within policy-making institutions that govern access and use of information. The Centre conducts research and offers educational programs and technical assistance to support diplomats, government policy makers and public interest stakeholders engaged in international instruments on intellectual property rights and related rights.
The Cradle Principles on Knowledge Governance developed in South Africa in 2022 guide and inform our work. The principles focus on the need for balance in our approaches to knowledge governance, promoting the public interest and guarding against predatory approaches to data extraction and use.
We draw on a global network of top thinkers from academic centres of excellence across the world, including specialists in intellectual property law, computational research, human rights and traditional knowledge.
Staff and Leadership
The Geneva Centre on Knowledge Governance is supported by a core team responsible for driving the Centre’s research, programmes, and partnerships. The staff bring together diverse expertise across knowledge governance, ensuring the Centre’s work is informed, inclusive, and globally engaged.
Sean Michael Flynn
Director
He is Editor in Chief of Infojustice.org, a leading public interest law and policy blog. He is a special faculty appointment at American University Washington College of Law, visiting Scholar at the University of Amsterdam’s Institute for Information Law (IViR), and Senior Research Associate at the University of Cape Town’s Intellectual Property Unit. Prior to joining WCL, Professor Flynn completed a Fulbright Fellowship, was clerk to Chief Justice Arthur Chaskalson, South African Constitutional Court and Judge Raymond Fisher, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, practiced law at Spiegel & McDiarmid and the Consumer Project on Technology, and served on the policy team advising then Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights Deval Patrick.
Andrés Izquierdo
Counsel
Before joining PIJIP, Andrés Izquierdo practiced law through his award-winning intellectual property and cyber law practice in Colombia. He has been named one of the best entertainment law attorneys in Colombia by the publications Best Lawyers (2020), and top Intellectual Property practitioner by Chambers and Partners (2014-2020), and is author of the book Cyberlaw by Wolters Kluwer. Izquierdo was previously Business and Legal Director for Sony Music Entertainment in the Andean Region, and litigation partner in Palacio, Izquierdo & Ballesteros, an intellectual property law firm in Colombia. He has LLM degrees in Intellectual Property from American University Washington College of Law and from the University of Turin – WIPO, and a law degree from Universidad de Los Andes.
Susan Isiko Štrba
Counsel and Senior Fellow
She combines teaching and research with providing policy and legislative advice and technical training to governments, intergovernmental organisations and civil society. She focusses mainly on human rights, intellectual property (IP), trade and development. Dr Isiko Štrba is the author of “International Copyright Law and Access to Education in Developing Countries: Exploring Multilateral Legal and Quasi-Legal Solutions”, a leading guide to the functioning of international copyright law for the public interest in developing countries. She has also published numerous journal articles in the field of food security, health, education, trade, IP and development.
She currently researches the interface of technology, intellectual property and development, with the focus on Africa. She is a member of the International Association for the Advancement of Teaching and Research in Intellectual Property (ATRIP) and a member of the Executive Council of the Society of International Economic Law (SIEL). Dr Isiko Štrba has taught Intellectual property, competition law and human rights in various institutions including: the Boston University (Geneva International Campus), The Graduate Institute, Trade Policy Training Centre in Africa (TRAPCA), the International University in Geneva, University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa and the WIPO Academy.
Ben Cashdan
Director of Communications
Ben has a masters degree in Social and Political Sciences from Kings College Cambridge and a Postgraduate Certificate in Economics from the London School of Economics. Ben also continued his postgraduate studies at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland in the Department of Economic Geography. He was South African producer for Harry Belafonte’s biographical documentary Sing Your Song. Ben has also produced 4 episodes of The World Debate on BBC World News. He developed and produced the first season of South2North on Al Jazeera English, the first global talk show to be produced in Africa for a major global broadcaster. In December 2013 Cashdan produced an episode of BBC Question Time on South Africa after Mandela.
Ben has directed a number of broadcast media projects on democracy and development in partnership with agencies including the World Economic Forum, the United Nations Development Programme and the African Leadership Academy.
Luca Schirru
Research Coordinator
Collaborating Research Centres
The Geneva Centre on Knowledge Governance partners with other academic programmes for the study of intellectual property and information law. Collaborating organisations engage in and guide the Centre’s activities and projects and collaborate with the Centre and each other on research and academic activities. Our collaborating partners include:
Governmental and Non-Government Organizations
The Geneva Centre provides technical assistance to a coalition of non-governmental organizations that represent the interests of research, education and cultural heritage institutions, and partners with intergovernmental organisations that provide technical assistance to diplomatic delegations in Geneva. Our NGO and intergovernmental partners include:
Funders
We gratefully acknowledge the support of Arcadia, a charitable fund of Lisbet Rausing and Peter Baldwin, whose commitment to preserving knowledge and promoting open access helps make our work possible.




