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Faculty of Law Twilight Seminar - The Environment in the Courtroom

You are invited to attend:

Faculty of Law Twilight Seminar 

The Environment in the Courtroom: Rethinking Law for the Planet 

With Dr Alessandro Pelizzon

Date: Tuesday, 7 October 2025
Time: 5.00pm-6.30pm (AEST)
Venue: Faculty of Law (Building 4), Level 2, Room 2_31 - View on campus map
Closest Parking: PG2 (Parking General 2) - View on campus map

This event will be held as part of Bond University’s Sustainability Festival 2025.

In 2008, Ecuador was the first country in the world to introduce three revolutionary provisions in its new Constitution, which recognised Nature (or Pacha Mama) as a legal subject with constitutionally protected rights. Since then, the number of legal initiatives – constitutional provisions, legislated acts, judicial decisions, and a host of semi- and quasi- legal initiatives – has grown exponentially, now spanning well over 40 different jurisdictions, including the international sphere. Former UN Special Rapporteur on Human Rights and the Environment, David Boyd, aptly called this the fastest growing legal movement of the twenty-first century.

The emergence of rights of Nature provisions and related initiatives, however, reveals a much deeper shift within legal thought than simply increasing the scope of legal subjectivity to include the more-than-human world within its purview. It represents, in fact, a journey toward a veritable ecological jurisprudence, a theory and practice of law that is informed by, and contends with, our collective growing (and perhaps reawakened) ecological awareness.

The seminar will commence at 5.30pm with light refreshments being offered from 5pm (vegan, gluten-free, and dairy-free options available).

Please register your attendance by 5pm, Monday 29 September 2025.

About Dr Alessandro Pelizzon

Alessandro Pelizzon headshot

Dr Alessandro Pelizzon completed his LLB/LLM at the University of Turin in Italy, specializing in comparative law and legal anthropology with a field research project conducted in the Andes. His Doctoral research, conducted at the University of Wollongong, focused on native title and legal pluralism in the Illawarra region. Alessandro has been exploring the emerging discourse on rights of nature, Wild Law and Earth Jurisprudence since its inception, with a particular focus on the intersection between this emerging discourse and different legal ontologies. His most recent book, titled Ecological Jurisprudence: The Law of Nature and the Nature of Law and published in open access format by Springer, captures his two decades of work in the field.

Alessandro is an Associate Professor in the School of Law and Society at the University of the Sunshine Coast in Australia, as well as a co-founder and an Executive Committee Member of the Global Alliance for the Rights of Nature and an expert member of the UN Harmony with Nature Programme. 

Alessandro’s main areas of research are legal anthropology, legal theory, comparative law, ecological jurisprudence, constitutional law, sovereignty, Indigenous rights, and University governance.

BLD 04_2_31

Sustainability Festival 2025

This event is part of Bond's 2025 Sustainability Festival. This year’s Sustainability Festival invites staff and students to explore bold new ideas around waste, reuse, and regeneration. 

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