Connect with us
Follow us on social media
The idea of multi-species justice challenges fundamental understandings about who counts, to whom responsibility is owed and how societies ought to be organised in the face of environmental and climate crisis.
To make a real difference, however, multi-species justice needs to be taken up in actual institutional and social transformation, particularly at a time where we are witnessing heightened social and political conflict as well as significant regressive moves in democracy and social justice across the world.
This panel discussion will reflect on the challenges of institutionalising multi-species justice at a historical moment characterised by both a burning desire to bring about radical change and concerted efforts to wind change back. The speakers will consider key sites of innovation including international laws on ecocide, the expansion of personhood beyond the human, judicial interventions, and democratic experiments. We aspire to provoke a lively discussion about how to navigate a path between inspiring transformative ideals and challenging political realities.
This event was presented online on 22 June 2022.
Danielle Celermajeris a Professor of Sociology and Social Policy at the University of Sydney, and Deputy Director – Academic of the Sydney Environment Institute.Her books includeSins of the Nation and the Ritual of Apology(Cambridge University Press 2009),A Cultural Theory of Law in the Modern Age(Bloomsbury, 2018), and(Cambridge University Press, 2018).Sheis Director of the Multispecies Justice Project and along with her multispecies community, she has recently lived through the NSW fires, writing in the face of their experience of the “killing of everything”, which she calls “omnicide”.She is the Research Lead onConcepts and Practices of Multispecies Justice.
David Schlosbergis Professor of Environmental Politics in the Department of Government and International Relations at the University of Sydney, and Director of the Sydney Environment Institute. His work focuses on contemporary environmental and environmental justice movements, environment and everyday life, and climate adaptation planning and policy.He is the author of(Oxford, 2007); co-author of(Oxford, 2013); and co-editor of both(Oxford 2011), and(Oxford 2016). His latest book,,was published by Oxford.He is one of the Research Leads on,,,and.
Christine Winteris a Senior Lecturer in the Politics Program at the University of Otago Te Whare Whānanga o Ōtākou and a research affiliate of the Sydney Environment Institute. Her research focuses on the ways in which justice theory perpetuates practices of domination, oppression and violence in the settler states broadly and specifically for Māori of Aotearoa New Zealand. Her key areas of interest are multispecies, environmental, intergenerational and climate justice.
was one of the founding members of the School of Law and Justice at Southern Cross Universityand is a 2022 Visiting Fellow at the Sydney Environment Institute. She is the author ofLaw, Fiction and Activism in a Time of Climate Change(Routledge, 2019) andLaw, Climate Emergency and the Australian Megafires(Routledge, 2021), and co-editor ofLaw as if Earth Really Mattered:theWild Law Judgment Project(Routledge, 2017).Law, Fiction and Activism in a Time of Climate Changewas shortlisted for the international 2020 Hart-SLSA book prize and the 2020inauguralAustralian Legal Research Book Award.
is a Senior Lecturer in Anthropology and the Development Studies in the School of Social and Political Sciences at the University of Melbourne, and a 2022 Visiting Fellow at the Sydney Environment Institute. She works primarily on transnational social movements, with a particular interest in the global movement for the rights of nature in Ecuador, the United States, and Australia. Her recent ethnographic work has focused on the use of these rights in contexts of large-scale resource extraction.
Header image: Middle Fork, near North Bend, WA by Dave Hoefler via Unsplash.
Follow us on social media