Hallevy, Gabriel
Prof. Dr. Gabriel Hallevy, is an associate professor of criminal law in the Faculty of Law, Ono Academic College, which is the largest faculty of law in Israel and invited lecturer in the Swiss Institute of Comparative Law. All of Prof. Hallevy's books are cited by the Israeli Supreme Court and all other criminal courts in Israel. Prof. Gabriel Hallevy has LL.B. magna cum laude and LL.M. magna cum laude from Tel-Aviv University and Ph.D. summa cum laude from University of Haifa. He is a member of the Israeli bar. In 2008-2009 he was the chief editor of the Ono Academic College Law Review. The Knesset, the Israeli Parliament, granted him a special honorary certificate (the highest academic prize in Israel) for his research in criminal law in 2007. He lectures Criminal Law, Criminal Procedure, Evidence Law and Private International Law, and he is a member of the Law and Economics Association. Prof. Hallevy speaks Hebrew, English, French, German and Latin.
Gabriel Hallevy is professor of criminal law and criminal justice at the Faculty of Law, Ono Academic College, the largest faculty of law in Israel. He earned his LL.B. magna cum laude from Tel-Aviv University, and was on the Dean's List. He earned his LL.M. magna cum laude from Tel-Aviv University, and his Ph.D. summa cum laude from the University of Haifa. One year after obtaining his Ph.D. degree, he was promoted to Senior Lecturer (Associate Professor), and less than three years later, at age 37, to Professor. He was a visiting professor in the Swiss Institute of Comparative Law (2007-2009), and Editor in Chief of the Ono Academic College Law Review. Professor Hallevy is currently a member of the editorial board of 6 international law reviews.
In 2007 Professor Hallevy was granted a special honorary prize by the Knesset (the highest academic prize in Israel) for the research in criminal law. He has over 50 publications in English, French, German, and Hebrew (12 books and numerous articles published or accepted for publication in prestigious law reviews, including those of Harvard, Cardozo, Akron, Alabama, Syracuse, Pepperdine, Northwestern University, American University, and others. He is frequently cited in the Israeli Supreme Court, which has embraced most of his original ideas in criminal law (e.g., the conspiracy test in the law of complicity, the interpretation model of the criminal norm, the proposed insanity test, and many more). He is the author of the most popular textbook in criminal law in Israel (four volumes, over 4,000 pages) and of the most popular textbook in criminal justice in Israel (four volumes, over 3,000 pages).
Professor Hallevy speaks English, French, German, and Hebrew.