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Staff & Members
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Director Professor
Tim Bonyhady |
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Associate Director Andrew
Macintosh |
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Don
Anton |
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Brad
Jessup |
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Judith
Jones |
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James
Prest
“Legislation to Encourage Renewable Energy Deployment: A Comparative
Review” paper presented to the National Environmental Law Association
2008 National Conference Esplanade Hotel, Freemantle, Perth 27-28 March
2008.
"A comparative review of legal mechanisms for renewable energy development"
paper presented to Environmental and Climate Change Legal Symposium, Wellington,
New Zealand, 2-3 April 2008.
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Matthew
Zagor |
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Adjunct Professor

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Martijn Wilder
Martijn Wilder heads Baker & McKenzie's Global Climate Change and
Emissions Trading Practice. Representing an international client base,
Martijn has advised numerous
governments and international agencies on the development and design of
climate change and emissions trading laws including the EU, Australia
and NZ, Malaysia, a number of Southern African governments, UNEP and UNDP.
He is also Chair of the NSW Climate Change Council, Chair of the NSW GGAS
DSA Transition Taskforce, Chair of the NSW Government Carbon Trading Hub
Taskforce, on the NSW GGAS Transition Taskforce, on the advisory board
of the Voluntary Carbon Scheme Agriculture, Forestry and other Land Use
(AFOLU) Standard on the Governing Board of the UK Government's Renewable
Energy and Energy Efficiency Partnership (REEEP), Chair of TRAFFIC (Oceania)
and a Governor of WWF. |
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Ian Fry
Ian Fry works as the International Environmental Officer for the Environment
Department of the Government of Tuvalu. He has held this position for
over ten years and has represented the Tuvalu Government in numerous international
fora including the World Summit on Sustainable Development, Commission
for Sustainable Development, UN Framework Convention on Climate Change
(UNFCCC) and the Kyoto Protocol, Convention on Biological Diversity, and
United Nations General Assembly. Ian is the spokesperson for the Alliance
of Small Island States on matters relating to land use, land use change
and forestry and more generally on issues relating to mitigation in the
consideration of future climate change regimes. He held the position of
Vice-Chair of the Facilitative Branch of the Compliance Committee under
the Kyoto Protocol.
Ian also undertakes consultancy work primarily associated with negotiations
training in the context of multilateral environmental agreements. His
work focuses on building the capacity of government representatives from
Least Developed Countries (LDCs) and Small Island Developing States. He
has facilitated negotiations training workshops in the Cook Islands, Federated
States of Micronesia, Fiji, the Marshall Islands, Nepal, Samoa, Senegal,
and Tuvalu, as well as special pre-Conference of Party workshops for LDCs
in Canada, Italy, Indonesia, Kenya and Thailand. This work is carried
out in association with the Foundation for International Environmental
Law and Development (UK), the United Nations Environment Programme, WWF
Pacific and the Secretariat of the Pacific Regional Environment Programme.
Prior to working for the Tuvalu Government, Ian worked as a writer for
Earth Negotiations Bulletin. He has been a long term member of the IUCN
Commission on Environmental Law and a member of the International Council
on Environmental Law. He is currently undertaking a part-time doctorate
through the Fenner School of Environment and Society (ANU) looking at
land use change and forestry issues under the UNFCCC and the Kyoto Protocol.
Qualifications: Bachelor of Applied Science (Biology)
(CCAE), Grad Dip Media (CCAE), Master of Environmental Studies (Macq U),
Master of Environmental Law (with merit) ANU, Post Grad Dip. International
Law (ANU). |
Associate

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Imran Habib Ahmad
Mr Ahmad holds a Masters degree in Sustainable International Development
from Brandeis University, Heller School of Social Policy. He is an alumnus
of the Berkeley Environmental Leadership Program, Kennedy School Environmental
Economics and Policy Analysis Program, Bucerius School on Global Governance,
Central European University and a participant of the European Union Visitors
Program.
He is an expert on climate change policy and a global resource person
in the area of climate change and multilateral environmental agreements.
He has been an invited presenter at events organised by leading think
tanks including Chatham House, Wilton Park, East-West Center, IIED, IISD,
IDS and the Pew Center. He is a global expert on climate change negotiations
and was involved as a lead negotiator from Pakistan including the finalization
of the Marrakech Accords in Marrakech in 2001 and Special Climate Change
Fund in 2003. He has represented the G-77/China block of developing countries
in climate change negotiations and was elected as an Asian expert on two
of UNFCCC expert bodies on Climate Change. He played a leading role in
setting up the national public policy process in response to addressing
the climate change problem in Pakistan following the finalization of the
Marrakech accords. |
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