Candidate info
Link to qualifications details
Experience in fields of concern to IUCN:Catherine’s primary field of teaching and research is environmental law and justice. She has published and presented internationally on a wide range of domestic and international environmental law and justice topics, winning several prizes for her work, including the 2018 IUCN Academy of Environmental Law Senior Scholar prize. In relation to conservation, she teaches biodiversity and conservation law, as well as climate change law and policy, and animal rights and welfare. Her research and writing address specific conservation and biodiversity topics such as on biodiversity offsets, ecosystem-based management, and pesticide law and regulation. Catherine has also written on wider matters such as precaution, ‘rights of nature’, the Environmental Rule of Law, deep seabed mining (in New Zealand and the Pacific), and climate adaptation. Catherine’s secondary specialty is indigenous rights, including self-determination, plus the recognition of indigenous cosmologies in law to change the legal relationships between humans and nature. At the 2014 World Parks Congress, the 2016 World Conservation Congress, and 2018 WCEL Congress on the Environmental Rule of Law (EROL) Catherine participated in the WCEL sessions, focusing on such alternative frameworks to better uphold responsibilities for nature. Catherine’s upcoming work includes with IUCN Commission on Ecosystem Management (CEM) on how laws and policies can advance ecosystem management principles for biodiversity conservation, the 2020 WCEL EROL Congress, and a 2020 IUCN New Zealand conference on Conservation in a Climate Crisis.
Acceptance of NominationManifesto