Education
Harvard Kennedy School. University of Sydney. London School of Economics.
Harvard Kennedy School. University of Sydney. London School of Economics.
United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon appointed Hocking for two terms, first on 15 May 2009 and again on 15 May 2013, to head the Registry of the ICTY, a neutral organ of the Tribunal which provides legal, diplomatic and administrative support to Judges, Prosecution and Defence. The United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon also appointed Hocking on 18 January 2012 as the first Registrar of the Mechanism for International Criminal Tribunals and entrusted him with its effective start-up. Hocking joined the ICTY in 1997 as the legal officer coordinator on the ICTY’s first multi-accused proceedings, the Celebici case.
He subsequently served as Senior Legal Officer for the common Appeals Chambers of the ICTY and the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda.
He was the ICTY Deputy Registrar from 2004-2009. Prior to his engagement with the United Nations, he held legal and policy adviser positions internationally and domestically, including with the Organisation for Economic Company-operation and Development (Organization of European Cooperation and Development) in Paris, the Australian Government"s national multicultural television and radio broadcaster, the Special Broadcasting Service, the British Film Institute in London and the Australian Film Commission.
Hocking has been called to the bar at Lincoln’s Inn, London, and has been admitted as a barrister/solicitor with the Supreme Court of Victoria and Supreme Court of New South Wales in Australia. He holds a Master of Law with merit from the University of London (London School of Economics and Political Science), a Bachelor of Law from the University of Sydney, and a Bachelor of Science from Monash University in Melbourne, Australia.
He studied at the Harvard Kennedy School of Government.