Muhammad Imran Khan

Muhammad Imran Khan

Dr. Muhammad Imran Khan

Member of Core Crimes cluster


Muhammad Imran Khan is a scholar of public international law whose research engages critically with the structural, historical, and normative dimensions of macro-criminality in the global legal order. His work, spanning international human rights law, international humanitarian law, and the role of non-state actors, examines how power asymmetries, colonial legacies, and economic interests shape the adoption, implementation, and contestation of legal norms across jurisdictions.

As a researcher affiliated with the MacroCrimes, he has contributed to interdisciplinary inquiries into core crimes, security governance, and the tension between public security and individual rights. His scholarship further explores the interaction between EU external action, trade policy, and human rights promotion, as well as the legal and political implications of armed non-state actors in conflict and environmental contexts.

Currently serving as Senior Assistant Professor at Bahria University Islamabad, he combines doctrinal, critical, and socio-legal approaches to interrogate how international law both responds to and reproduces global injustices.



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