Events

Climate Justice Series at HLS: Day 2

Time
8:30 am ET - 5 pm ET
Venue
Austin 111, Harvard Law School (enter through southern entrance of Austin Hall) | Zoom
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Event banner for "Symposium: African Perspectives on International Climate Change Law" on March 29, 9 am - 5 pm. In Austin 111 at Harvard Law School.

Day 2 of the Series of Climate Justice Events at HLS (The Harvard Human Rights Journal Symposium is on Day 1) will consist of the all-day academic symposium “African Perspectives on International Climate Change Law” and the lunch event “The Role of Courts in Advancing the Right to a Healthy Environment: Lessons from Latin America”. Panel sessions at the symposium will cover topics such as “Participation of African States in Shaping International Law” or “Climate Change and Loss and Damage”. The lunch event will bring together leading judges and supreme court justices from Brazil, Argentina and Mexico to provide an overview of the judicialization of a right to a healthy environment in Latin America.

This is a hybrid symposium. If you wish to join virtually, please register on Zoom.

Attendees can enter through the southern entrance of Austin Hall (see screenshot). We kindly ask interested in-person attendees who do not hold Harvard University IDs to register online. If you have difficulty entering the building, please write to HRP Program Coordinator Kai Mueller ([email protected]).

Food and drinks will be provided throughout the day.

There has been a significant rise in climate change litigation over the last decade. The recent advisory opinion proceedings before the International Court of Justice (ICJ) and the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea (ITLOS), as well as the request for an advisory opinion before the Inter-American Court of Human Rights are judicial proceedings with potentially far-reaching implications towards the obligations of states in connection with climate change.

Event banner for "Symposium: African Perspectives on International Climate Change Law" on March 29, 9 am - 5 pm. In Austin 111 at Harvard Law School.

Although African states have signalized a willingness to play a significant role in global climate matters, it is far from clear whether or how much they will participate in shaping international climate change law. This is despite the fact that Africa has contributed only to a very limited extent to the climate crisis, with just about 4% percent of global cumulative emissions, and stands out disproportionately as one of the most vulnerable regions in the world. This symposium will foreground African perspectives on international climate change law which, due to pre-existing power structures, are more likely to be overlooked in global norm-making processes.

The symposium is co-organized by HRP, the Center for International Law & Policy in Africa (CILPA) and the Dullah Omar Institute at the University of the Western Cape. It is co-sponsored by the Salata Institute, the Petrie-Flom Center, the David Rockefeller for Latin American Studies, Human Rights Entrepreneurs and Incubator Clinic, and the Program on Law and Society in the Muslim World.

Symposium Program

Gerald L. Neuman, J. Sinclair Armstrong Professor of International, Foreign, and Comparative Law at Harvard Law School and Director of the School’s Human Rights Program

Hajer Gueldich, AU Legal Counsel, Professor at of International Law at the University of Carthage, Former Chairperson of the African Union Commission on International Law

Moderator: Gerald L. Neuman, J. Sinclair Armstrong Professor of International, Foreign, and Comparative Law at Harvard Law School and Director of the School’s Human Rights Program

James Gathii, Wing-Tat Lee Chair in International Law and Professor of Law at Loyola University Chicago School of Law

Phoebe Okowa, D.Phil., Professor of Public International Law, Director of Graduate Studies, Queen Mary University of London

Alpha Sesay, Hon., Deputy Minister of Justice, Sierra Leone

Charles C. Jalloh, Ph.D., Distinguished University Professor at Florida International University, member of the UN International Law Commission, William Kleh Distinguished Visiting Professor of International Law at Boston University School of Law

Payam Akhavan, S.J.D., Professor of International Law and Chair in Human Rights, Massey College, University of Toronto, Member of the Permanent Court of Arbitration, Special Advisor to the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court

Moderator: Idriss Fofana, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Law at Harvard Law School

Makane Moïse Mbengue, Ph.D., Professor of International Law and Director of the Department of International Law and International Organization at the Faculty of Law of the University of Geneva

Saadia Bhatty, Partner, Gide

Gus Waschefort, Ph.D., Senior Lecturer at the School of Law, University of Essex

12:00 | 1:30	Lunch Discussion

The Role of Courts in Advancing the Right to a Healthy Environment: Lessons from Latin America

Welcoming Remarks

Sol Carbonell, Interim Executive Director of the David Rockefeller Center for Latin American Studies, Harvard University

Moderator: Alicia Ely Yamin, Lecturer on Law; Senior Fellow on Global Health and Rights at the Petrie-Flom Center for Health Law Policy, Biotechnology and Bioethics at Harvard Law School

Alfredo Gutiérrez Ortiz Mena, Supreme Court of Justice of the Nation, Mexico

Antonio Herman Benjamin, Justice of the National High Court of Brazil

Ricardo Lorenzetti, Judge of the Supreme Court of Justice of Argentina

Moderator: Ada Ordor, Ph.D., Steiner Visiting Professor in Human Rights at Harvard Law School, Professor of Law and Director of the Centre for Comparative Law in Africa (CCLA) at the Faculty of Law, University of Cape Town

Dalindyebo Shabalala, Ph.D., Professor of Law at the Suffolk University Law School, Assistant Professor of International Economic Law (adjunct) at Maastricht University

Oluwatoyin Adejonwo, Ph.D., Senior Lecturer at Faculty of Law, University of Lagos. Honorary Senior Lecturer in Law, Dundee Law School, University of Dundee   

Angela van der Berg, University of Western Cape, Associate Professor at the Department of Public Law and Jurisprudence, Director at Global Environmental Law Centre, University of Western Cape

Funmi Abioye, LL.D., Associate Professor of Law in the Department of Jurisprudence at the University of South Africa, Sessional Lecturer at the University of Saskatchewan, College of Law  

Olanrewaju Fagbohun, Professor of Environmental Law and Former Vice Chancellor at Lagos State University

Benyam Dawit Mezmur, Ph.D., Professor of Law and Deputy Dean for Research and Post-Graduate Studies at the Law Faculty at the University of the Western Cape, member of the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child

Moderator: Angela Hefti, Ph.D., Visiting Researcher, Human Rights Program, Harvard Law School

Ademola Oluborode Jegede, Professor of Law, NRF rated researcher, and Interim Director Ismail Mahomed Centre for Human and Peoples’ Rights, University of Venda School of Law

Benyam Dawit Mezmur, Ph.D., Professor of Law and Deputy Dean for Research and Post-Graduate Studies at the Law Faculty at the University of the Western Cape, member of the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child

Yusra Suedi, Ph.D., Lecturer in International Law at the University of Manchester

Pedi Obani, Ph.D., Associate Professor at the University of Bradford School of Law, Visiting Researcher in Water Security, Policy, and Governance at the University of Leeds

Abadir M. Ibrahim, J.S.D., Associate Director, Human Rights Program, Harvard Law School

Charles C. Jalloh; Hajer Gueldich; Benyam Dawit Mezmur

Participant Biographies

Funmi Abioye is a sessional Lecturer at the University of Saskatchewan, College of Law. Until recently, she was Associate Professor of Law in the Department of Jurisprudence at the University of South Africa. She has been teaching in this field and other fields for the past ten years. Her interests include various fields of international law, rule of law in Africa, good governance and legitimate leadership on the continent, and she has published successfully in these fields. She is an admitted Solicitor and Barrister of the Supreme Court of Nigeria, where she served as counsel for 5 years in various matters before commencing with her LLM and LLD degrees. Abioye is an editor of the Comparative and International Law Journal of Southern Africa (CILSA). She has held many administrative posts within the College of Law. She obtained her LLM and LLD degrees from the University of Pretoria (UP), South Africa, in the field of International Law.

Oluwatoyin Adejonwo is a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Public Law, Faculty of Law, University of Lagos, and Honorary Senior Lecturer in Law at Dundee Law School, University of Dundee. She recently visited the Faculty of Law, University of Stellenbosch as a visiting scholar and a guest lecturer in the postgraduate course on sustainable development law, and the Center for Human Rights, Faculty of Law University of Pretoria as a guest lecturer for the Human Rights and Democratisation in Africa Programme. Dr. Adejonwo is the founding Director of the Center for Climate Change and Sustainable Development (3CSD) and a Solicitor and Advocate of the Supreme Court of Nigeria. She has, at various times, consulted for international environmental organizations including the Heinrich Böll Foundation and the Federal Ministry of Environment. Oluwatoyin serves on the Committee of Experts providing legal, advisory and technical support on climate change to the Department of Climate Change (DCC) of the Federal Ministry of Environment. She holds a PhD in International Environmental Law from the School of Law, University of Dundee, United Kingdom.

Payam Akhavan is Professor of International Law and Senior Fellow at Massey College, University of Toronto, Member of the Permanent Court of Arbitration, and former Legal Advisor, Office of the Prosecutor, International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) (1994-2000). He has also served with the UN in Bosnia, Rwanda, Cambodia, Guatemala, and Timor Leste. He was previously Full Professor at McGill University Faculty of Law in Montreal and Distinguished Visiting Professor at the University of Toronto Faculty of Law, with other appointments at Yale Law School, Leiden University, European University Institute, Oxford University, Université Paris Nanterre, and Sciences Po École de Droit. He has appeared as counsel before the International Criminal Court, the International Court of Justice, the European Court of Human Rights, the Supreme Court of Canada, and the Supreme Court of the United States. He also serves as Senior Advisor to the Ministry of Global Affairs of Canada, is Senior Fellow and Canadian Co-Chair of the Raoul Wallenberg Centre for Human Rights, and Co-Founder of the Iran Human Rights Documentation Centre.

Saadia Bhatty is a dual-qualified attorney (admitted to the New York bar) and a French avocat (admitted to the Paris Bar) based in London, specialized in international dispute resolution, in particular international commercial and investment arbitration as well as in public international law matters. She is a Partner at Gide, an international law firm, where she leads the international investment arbitration team of their London office. Prior to working in London, she worked for other top international law firms in Paris and in New York. Saadia acts as counsel to states, state-entities as well as private entities in disputes related to foreign direct investments, as well as complex transnational contracts before a variety of international arbitral institutions around the world (including ICSID, ICC, LCIA, the OHADA court, HKIAC, VIAC). She also acts as an arbitrator, and is listed on the arbitrator panels of a number of institutions in Europe, Africa, Turkey, Pakistan and Singapore. Saadia also advises states, and regional organizations in the reform of their international treaties, which includes implementing environmental and climate change-related provisions, especially in Africa. She is currently part of the legal team (led by Professor Mbengue) advising the African Union before the International Court of Justice in the advisory proceedings on the obligations of states related to climate change. A graduate from Harvard Law School, the Paris I Panthéon-Sorbonne University in Paris, and the Ecole Normale Supérieure, Saadia regularly writes articles, lectures in universities, trains private practitioners and government officials, and speaks at conferences in international arbitration across the world. 

Kim Bouwer is an Assistant Professor at Durham Law School in 2021. She has held posts or visiting positions at a variety of global institutions, including UCL, the EUI, the University of the Witwatersrand, KCL, and the University of Exeter.  From November 2023 she is a Visiting Senior Fellow at the Grantham Research Institute at the London School of Economics. Dr Kim Bouwer specializes in climate change and environmental law, and private law (predominantly torts). She has also been the UK Rapporteur for the British Institute for International and Comparative Law on their Global Perspectives on Corporate Climate Legal Tactics project.  Before her doctoral research, Dr Bouwer worked as a lawyer. She trained conducting legal community service in Johannesburg, then worked as an attorney in South Africa. Thereafter, Dr. Bouwer worked as a solicitor at several Legal 500 firms in London, conducting claimant public interest litigation. Dr. Bouwer holds an LLB from the University of the Witwatersrand (Johannesburg) and an LLM from the University of London. She completed her PhD at University College London.

Olanrewaju Fagbohun is a Professor of Environmental Law and Former Vice Chancellor at Lagos State University. He lectured at LASU for 19 years at both undergraduate and post-graduate levels before joining the Nigerian Institute of Advanced Legal Studies (NIALS) in 2009. At different times, Professor Fagbohun has served as consultant and task leader for the United Nations Environmental Programme, the British Council, the European Commission, World Council on Genetics, University of Nottingham, the Harvard Medical School, the National Judicial Institute, and several State Governments among others.  He is an Assessor/External Examiner for MPhil/Ph.D. programs of a number of universities in Nigeria; the University of Forth Hare, South Africa; and the University of Amsterdam, Netherlands.  He is also on the Board of the Environmental Law Research Institute. He is a founding member of the Environmental Law Research Institute (ELRI), a nonprofit organization for applied environmental research and policy analysis. Professor Fagbohun received his training at the University of Ife (now Obafemi Awolowo University) and at the University of Lagos from where he earned his Bachelor of Laws, Master of Laws and later doctorate degree.

Idriss Fofana is an Assistant Professor of Law at Harvard Law School where he teaches courses in public international law, legal history, and comparative law. He writes and teaches in the areas of international law, comparative law, legal history, and law and colonialism. Before joining the faculty, he was the Reginald F. Lewis Fellow at Harvard Law School. He also served as a Judicial Fellow for Judge Abdulqawi Yusuf, then president of the International Court of Justice. He has also been a visiting scholar at Zhejiang University, Jinan University (Guangzhou), Fudan University Law School, and Paris 1 University Panthéon-Sorbonne. Professor. Professor Fofana has also participated in litigation and advocacy on matters of immigration, citizenship, and national security, and he has worked in the public international law and international arbitration practices of major law firms. He received an A.B. in physics degree from Harvard College and a J.D. from Yale Law School, where he participated in litigation and advocacy on matters of immigration, citizenship, and national security. He received his doctoral training in African and Chinese history at Columbia University.

James T. Gathii is the Wing-Tat Lee Chair in International Law and Professor of Law at Loyola University Chicago School of Law since July 2012. He sits on the board of editors of the Journal of African Law and the Journal of International Trade Law and Policy, among others. He is co-editor in Chief of the African Journal of International Economic Law (AfJIEL) and a founding Editor of Afronomicslaw and one of the convenors of the African Sovereign Debt Justice Network (AfSDJN). Professor Gathii’s research and teaching interests are in Public International Law, International Trade Law, Third World Approaches to International Law, (TWAIL), Comparative Constitutional Law and Human Rights. He has sat as an arbitrator in two international commercial arbitrations and one ISDS case hosted by the Permanent Court of Arbitration in the Hague. He is a founding member of the TWAIL network. He is an elected member of the International Academy of International Law. He has consulted for the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, (OHCHR), and the Economic Commission for Africa, (ECA), among others. Professor Gathii is a graduate of the University of Nairobi, Kenya, and Harvard Law School.

Hajer Gueldich is the current African Union Legal Counsel. She served as an elected Member of the African Union Commission on International law (AUCIL) (2015-2023) and the Chairperson of the Commission (2022-2023). She was appointed as a member of the team of experts on the Institutional Reform of the African Union, since 2017. Prof. Gueldich is a professor in law at the University of Carthage (Tunisia) where she is also the Director of the Center of Research in International law, International Jurisdictions and Comparative Constitutional Law. She is also a visiting Professor at the Universities of Angers and Rennes (France), Venice and Siena (Italy), Saint Joseph (Lebanon), Laval University (Canada) and the Pan-African University (Cameroon). She has several publications in the fields of international law, humanitarian law, human rights, constitutional law, political science, administrative organization, compared legal systems and transitional periods, in Tunisia and abroad. Prof. Gueldich obtained her undergraduate law degrees as well as her PhD at the University of Carthage.

Angela Hefti is a Swiss National Science Foundation Postdoctoral Fellow and a Visiting Researcher at Harvard Law School.  Angela spent her fellowship at the European Court of Human Rights. Previously, she was a research fellow at the Schell Center for International Human Rights, where she conducted research towards the completion of her Ph.D., based at the University of Lucerne in Switzerland. She was also a co-founder and co-President of the YLS European Law Association. She earned her LL.M. as a Fulbright scholar. Prior to her graduate studies, Angela worked at the University of Lucerne in Switzerland, where she was the Associate Director of an international human rights program and a researcher/lecturer. She also clerked at the Inter-American Court of Human Rights in Costa Rica and was a visiting researcher at the Max Planck Institute for Comparative Public Law and International Law in Germany. During her legal education in Spain and Switzerland, Angela interned at the Appeals Chamber of the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda in the Netherlands, and the Spanish Refugee Commission in Las Palmas de Gran Canaria.

Abadir M. Ibrahim is the Associate Director of the Human Rights Program (HRP) at Harvard Law School. He plays a substantive and managerial role in innovating and implementing academic activities, including the speaker series, conferences, and the HRP’s various fellowships. Dr. Ibrahim’s current research agenda focuses on African approaches to human rights and his broader research interests encompass the intersections between global human rights normative structures and non-Western cultural/religious institutions and traditions with an emphasis on normative ethics and religion. His academic and legal work focuses on African countries, and especially his home country of Ethiopia, and engages with the African system of human rights. Dr. Ibrahim worked in different roles within the human rights field and his career spans government administration, legal practice, advocacy, scholarship and education. Previously, he was the Head of the Secretariat for the Legal and Justice Affairs Advisory Council of Ethiopia – an independent statutory body mandated with advising and providing technical support to the Ethiopian government on pro-democracy and pro-rights justice sector reforms. He earned his J.S.D. from the Intercultural Human Rights Program at St. Thomas University, School of Law. Dr. Ibrahim further holds LL.M. degrees from St. Thomas University and Addis Ababa University respectively, and an LL.B. from Addis Ababa University.

Charles C. Jalloh is a William Kleh Distinguished Visiting Professor of International Law at Boston University School of Law, Distinguished University Professor of International Law at Florida International University, in Miami, USA and Founder of the Center for International Law and Policy in Africa (CILPA). He is a member and special rapporteur of the UN International Law Commission (ILC). Formerly a Fulbright Distinguished Chair in Public International Law at Lund University, he has published widely in the field of international law and currently acts as co-counsel for several African States in advisory proceedings concerning climate change before the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea and the International Court of Justice. He serves on the editorial boards of several scholarly journals, including the African Journal of Legal Studies and the American Journal of International Law. Before academia, Jalloh practiced law at the national and international levels as Counsel in the Canadian Department of Justice and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Trade, a Legal Adviser in the Special Court for Sierra Leone, and an Associate Legal Officer in the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda. His education includes a B.A. from the University of Guelph, LL.B. and B.C.L. degrees from McGill University, a Master’s in International Human Rights Law, with distinction, from Oxford University, where he was a Chevening Scholar and a Ph.D. in International Law from the University of Amsterdam.

Ademola Oluborode Jegede is a Professor of Law and a National Research Foundation rated researcher in the School of Law, University of Venda, Thohoyandou, South Africa. He is currently serving as Interim Director of the Ismail Mahomed Centre for Human and Peoples’ Rights, University of Venda School of Law.  He has been a research visitor to the Centre for International Environmental Law, USA and Human Rights Institute at Abo Akademi, Finland. Prof. Jegede’s research area is on the intersection of climate change and biodiversity loss with human rights of vulnerable groups. He is a fellow of Salzburg Global Seminar and the initiator and convening Editor of African Journal of Climate Law and Justice. He holds degrees from Obafemi Awolowo University Ile-Ife, University of Ibadan and the Centre for Human Rights, Faculty of Law, University of Pretoria.

Makane Moïse Mbengue is Professor of International Law at the Faculty of Law of the University of Geneva and Director of the Department of International Law and International Organization. He is an Affiliate Professor at Sciences Po Paris (School of Law). He is a Member of the Curatorium of The Hague Academy of International Law and a member of the Institute of International Law. He is the President of the African Society of International Law (AfSIL) and he has acted and acts as expert for the African Union, a number of United Nations Institutions, the Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC), and the International Institute for Sustainable Development (IISD) among others. Professor Mbengue acts as counsel in disputes before international courts and tribunals (in particular before the International Court of Justice and the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea) and as arbitrator in investment cases. He is member of the Committee of Legal Experts of the Commission of Small Islands States on Climate Change and International Law (COSIS) and the Lead Counsel of the African Union for the pending ICJ advisory proceedings on climate change.

Benyam Dawit Mezmur is a Professor of Law and Deputy Dean for Research and Post-Graduate Studies at the Law Faculty at the University of the Western Cap (UWC). From 2022-2023, he was a Visiting Fellow at the Harvard Law School Human Rights Program. He is also Coordinator of the Children’s Rights Project at the Dullah Omar Institute for Constitutional Law, Governance, and Human Rights, at UWC. Since 2012, he has served on the United Nations Committee on the Rights of the Child, and served as its Chairperson. Professor Mezmur has served on the African Committee of Experts on the Rights and Welfare of the Child. Benyam has offered his technical services to a large number of organizations such as UNICEF, UNHCR, OHCHR, African Union, and the Special Representative of the Secretary General on Violence Against Children. He currently serves on the advisory and/or expert boards of a number of organizations including the Children’s Institute (Cape Town), Keeping Children Safe (UK), All Survivors Project (Liechtenstein), Institute on Statelessness (The Netherlands and UK), and the KidsRights International Children’s Peace Prize (Netherlands). Professor Mezmur obtained an LLB from Addis Ababa University, an LLM from the University of Pretoria, and a Doctor of Laws degree from the University of the Western Cape.

Gerald L. Neuman is the Director of the Human Rights Program, and the J. Sinclair Armstrong Professor of International, Foreign, and Comparative Law at Harvard Law School (HLS). He teaches courses in international human rights law, immigration and nationality law, and U.S. constitutional law. From 2011 to 2014, he served as a Member of the UN Human Rights Committee, the international body of independent experts that monitors compliance with the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, one of the principal human rights instruments that form the “International Bill of Rights.” Professor Neuman has published widely on issues of human rights law, immigration and nationality law, and U.S. and comparative constitutional law.  Prior to joining HLS, Neuman was the Herbert Wechsler Professor of Federal Jurisprudence at Columbia Law School. He began his teaching career at the University of Pennsylvania Law School and has also been a visiting professor at the Johann Wolfgang Goethe-Universitaet, Frankfurt-am-Main, Germany, and has taught in programs at the universities of Leiden, Freiburg, and Tokyo. He holds a J.D. from Harvard Law School, a Ph.D. from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and an A.B. from Harvard College.

Pedi Obani is an Associate Professor at the University of Bradford School of Law and a visiting researcher in Water Security, Policy, and Governance at the University of Leeds. Before starting her academic career, she qualified as a Barrister and Solicitor of the Supreme Court of Nigeria and was active in private law practice. Dr. Obani’s research interests revolve around inclusive development and sustainability, including the interactions between law and climate change, governance of water and other natural resources, and gender issues. In the course of her academic career, Pedi has received several national and international research grants and awards, such as the Global Challenges Research Fund, Nigeria Tertiary Education Trust Fund, and the United Kingdom African Studies Association Mary Kingsley Zochonis Fellowship. Dr. Obani graduated with a distinction from the University of Aberdeen and is a former NUFFIC Netherlands Fellowship Professional (NFP) fellow. She obtained her PhD from the University of Amsterdam in 2018. Following this, between 2019 and 2020, she worked with the United Nations University – Institute for Natural Resources in Africa (UNU-INRA) as a Research Fellow in Environmental Policy. 

Phoebe Okowa is Professor of Public International Law at Queen Mary, University of London. Educated at the University of Nairobi and Oxford, she previously taught at the University of Bristol and has held visiting appointments at the University of Lille and Stockholm. In 2011 and 2015, she was Global Visiting Professor at the New York University, School of Law. In 2017 she was nominated by the Government of Kenya to the Permanent Court of Arbitration and in November 2021, Professor Okowa was elected to the UN International Law Commission for the term 2023-2027. She is on the Public International Law Advisory Panel of the British Institute of International and Comparative Law and the Committee of Legal Experts of the Commission of Small Island States on Climate Change and International Law.   She has written on a wide range of contemporary international law topics including the interface between international responsibility and individual accountability for international crimes, unilateral and collective responses to the protection of natural resources in conflict zones, and aspects of the protection of the environment.

Ada Ordor is the Steiner Visiting Professor in Human Rights for the Spring term 2024. A law professor and director of the Centre for Comparative Law in Africa (CCLA) at the Faculty of Law, University of Cape Town (UCT), Professor Ordor’s work explores issues of law and development from various perspectives that demonstrate the interconnectedness of development processes and the laws that govern them. She has held academic positions at the Nigerian Law School from 2001 to 2007 and visiting research positions at the African Gender Institute, UCT, in 2000 as a visiting associate and at the Johns Hopkins University Institute for Policy Studies, Center for Civil Society Studies, Baltimore in 2003 as a senior international philanthropy fellow. She is an international fellowship alumna of the American Association of University Women and editor of the Journal of Comparative Law in Africa. Professor Ordor holds an LL.B. from the University of Jos, an LL.M from the University of Nigeria, and a Ph.D. from the University of Cape Town.

Alpha Sesay is the Deputy Minister of Justice for Sierra Leone since 2023. Until this appointment he was the Senior Democracy, Rights and Governance Advisor for USAID in Sierra Leone. Before USAID, he was Senior Advocacy Officer at the Open Society Foundations, based in Washington, DC, (USA) where he worked largely on human rights litigation and advocacy before regional and international human rights mechanisms. Mr. Sesay has had extensive experience working in the field of international human rights, international criminal justice and on broader issues relating to accountability for atrocity crimes. He has done so in the context of the Special Court for Sierra Leone, the International Criminal Court (ICC) in The Hague, and regional human rights bodies including the ECOWAS Court, African Commission and Court on Human and Peoples’ Rights. Mr. Sesay is founding president of the Fourah Bay College Human Rights Clinic and founding Executive Director of the Sierra Leone Court Monitoring Program. Sesay was an Visiting Fellow at the Harvard Law School Human Rights Program from 2018 to 2019. Mr. Sesay holds an LL.M in International Human Rights from the University of Notre Dame Law School, USA, and was called to the Sierra Leone Bar almost 20 years ago.

Dalindyebo Shabalala is a Professor of Law at Suffolk University Law School.  He also has a partial appointment as Assistant Professor of International Economic Law (Intellectual property) at Maastricht University in the Netherlands. Prof. Shabalala was Professor at the University of Dayton School of Law until 2023, Visiting Assistant Professor at CWRU School of Law from 2014 – 2017 and Assistant Professor of International Economic Law at Maastricht University from 2009 – 2014. Prof. Shabalala’s research focuses on the interaction of intellectual property law, especially patent law, with the rights of indigenous peoples and climate change law. He was also Managing Attorney of the Center for International Environmental Law’s Geneva office, and Director of CIEL’s Intellectual Property and Sustainable Development Project. He is the Vice Chair of CIEL’s Board of Trustees. Prof. Shabalala holds a Ph.D. from Maastricht University, Netherlands, a JD from the University of Minnesota Law School (cum laude), and a Bachelor of Arts from Vassar College, New York.

Yusra Suedi is a Lecturer in International Law at the University of Manchester where she is the Director of International Law LLM/MA programs and co-directs the Manchester International Law Centre. Prior to this, she was a Fellow in Law at the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE). Dr. Suedi actively practices international law and has previously worked for the United Nations Office in Geneva, the International Law Commission, the Institut Du Droit International, the International Labour Organization Administrative Tribunal and the International Court of Justice. She has also assisted counsel acting for governments and organizations before the International Court of Justice. She has held teaching and research positions at the London School of Economics (LSE) Law School and King’s College London, UK. She is a member of the Diversity and Advisory Body and Co-Convenor of the Interest Group on International Courts and Tribunals, both within the European Society of International Law. Dr. Suedi is also a Contributing Editor to CILDialogues Blog run by the Centre for International Law of the National University of Singapore. She holds a doctorate in Public International Law from the University of Geneva.

Angela van der Berg is the Director of the Global Environmental Law Centre (GELC) at the University of the Western Cape (UWC), Faculty of Law in South Africa. She also holds the position of Associate Professor in the Department of Public Law and Jurisprudence. Angela obtained a joint PhD in Law and Development from Tilburg University, Netherlands and the North-West University, South Africa in 2019. Angela’s academic experience falls in the domain of Public Law: specifically, International and Domestic (South African) Environmental Law, Climate Change Law, Constitutional Law, Urban Law, and Public Governance. Angela’s current research focuses on the global dynamics of environmental law and governance in the pursuit of more sustainable, resilient and climate just futures. Angela provides legal consulting for UN Habitat on an ad hoc basis. In November 2023 Angela was invited to serve as part of an expert committee to advise the African Union Committee of Experts on the Rights and Welfare of the Child on a study related to climate change and children’s rights.

Gus Waschefort is a Senior Lecturer at the School of Law, University of Essex. Gus Waschefort is a Member both of the Bar of England and Wales, as well as the Bar of South Africa and a member of Guernica 37 Chambers. Gus has a broad experience in public international law practice, with specific expertise in relation to the African continent. Prior to joining the University of Essex, he held academic appointments at the University of Pretoria, as lecturer, and the University of South Africa, as Associate Professor. Between 2011 and 2013 Gus was appointed as legal advisor to the UN Special Rapporteur on extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary executions. Gus has also been a visiting researcher to the International Law Centre of the Swedish National Defence University, as well as the Centre for Human Rights and Global Justice, at New York University. Prof. Waschefort has provided legal advice and training to the United Nations, as well as branches of the armed forces, government departments, national human rights mechanisms, and civil society organizations.  He holds an LLB degree from the University of Pretoria and a PhD, SOAS, from the University of London.

Event banner for "Lunch Discussion: The Role of Courts in Advancing the Right to a Healthy Environment: Lessons from Latin America" on March 29. In Austin 111 at Harvard Law School.

Latin America has been at the forefront of judicialization of a right to a healthy environment.  Courts in different countries have curbed burning and deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon, as well as the expansion of wind farms in Mexico; they have ordered the clean-up of river basins in Argentina and ordered the protection of important ecosystems in Colombia. Some high courts have embraced ‘rights of nature’ and have fashioned innovative structural remedies, which have included the creation of new institutions.   Nonetheless, there is a very mixed record on implementation of the judgments and a complex political economy around creating public policies that advance the effective enjoyment of rights to a healthy environment in a region wracked by economic inequality and the outsized power of extractive and other commercial interests. Leading judges and supreme court justices from Brazil, Argentina and Mexico will discuss the evolution of this jurisprudence in their respective countries, and a panel discussion will follow that examines challenges as well as successes.

Organizers encourage participation of individuals from academia, civil society, NHRIs, and intergovernmental bodies from the Global-South. No prior registration is required to attend these events.

Panelist Biographies

Antonio Herman Benjamin is a Justice of the Superior Tribunal de Justiça (STJ), the National High Court of Brazil. He is the president of the Brazilian Environmental Forum of Judges, director of the LLM Program on Justice at the National Judicial Academy of Brazil, chair emeritus of the World Commission on Environmental Law (WCEL), president of the Global Judicial Institute on the Environment, and secretary-general of the International Advisory Council for Environmental Justice of the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP). He is also a member of the UN Secretary General Legal Expert Group on Crimes against the Environment, and for a decade Councilor of the Brazilian Environmental Council. Justice Benjamin was a visiting professor in Environmental Law at the University of Texas School of Law and has published extensively in Brazil and abroad on environmental law, consumer law, and access to justice. He is also the former president of the Brazilian Fulbright Alumni Association.  Justice Benjamin received his LL.B. from the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, his LL.M. from the University of Illinois, and his PhD from the Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul.

Ricardo Lorenzetti is a Judge of the Supreme Court of Justice of Argentina. Previously, he was the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Argentina (2007–2018). He holds positions in various institutions, including as a founding member of the Global Judicial Institute on the Environment and member of its Governing Committee, the President of the International Advisory Council for the Advancement of Justice, Governance and Law for Environmental Sustainability of the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), goodwill ambassador for Environmental Justice of the Organization of American States (OAS), member of the Steering Committee of the World Commission on Environmental Law of the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN-WCEL). He is also the Director of the Environmental Law Specialization at the University of Buenos Aires, and of the specialization in civil responsibility of the University of Buenos Aires. Justice Lorenzetti graduated from the Department of Legal and Social Sciences of the National University of the Littoral of Santa Fe, Argentina and obtained a Doctorate in Legal and Social Sciences from the Department of Legal and Social Sciences of the National University of the Littoral.

Alfredo Gutiérrez Ortiz Mena has served as a justice of the Supreme Court of Justice of the Nation, Mexico, since 2012 for a 15-year term. Before this he was a Commissioner of the Mexican Revenue Service, after acting as Chief Counsel of the Mexican Revenue Service and General Administrator for Large Taxpayers. Mr. Mena is a member of the Mexican Bar Association and the New York Bar. In 1998 Alfredo Gutierrez began private practice as an associate with different Mexican and international law firms such as Covington & Burling of Washington, D.C., Ortiz, Sainz y Tron, S. C., Holland & Knight – Gallástegui y Lozano, S. C.  and White & Case, S.C., all of the latter in Mexico City. His private practice focused mainly in international taxation law and business. After completing his studies he joined the Ministry of Finance and Public Credit, with the Revenue and International Tax Matters Directorate. Later he joined the Office of the Attorney General for Tax Matters.  Mr. Mena obtained his law degree from the National Autonomous University of Mexico. At Harvard University he received a masters degree and a certificate in international taxation.

Alicia Ely Yamin (moderator) is a Lecturer on Law and a Senior Fellow on Global Health and Rights at the Petrie-Flom Center for Health Law Policy, Biotechnology and Bioethics at Harvard Law School; Adjunct Senior Lecturer on Health Policy and Management at the Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health; and Senior Advisor on Human Rights and Health Policy at the global health justice organization, Partners In Health. Dr. Yamin has served on numerous other UN, WHO and other global expert committees. Known globally for her trans-disciplinary work in relation to economic and social rights, sexual and reproductive health and rights, the right to health, and the intersections between development paradigms and human rights, Dr. Yamin’s career has bridged academia and activism. She has published multiple books and over 160 articles in law and policy journals, as well as peer-reviewed public health journals, in both English and Spanish. Yamin holds Juris Doctor and Master’s in Public Health degrees from Harvard University, and a Doctorate in Law from the University of Buenos Aires in Argentina.