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Cameron Holley

Cameron Holley

Associate Professor and Co-Director, Postgraduate Studies, University of New South Wales

c.holley@unsw.edu.au

The Law Building
University of New South Wales
UNSW Kensington Campus
Sydney NSW 2052,
Australia

Titles

  • Associate Professor and Co-Director, Postgraduate Studies, University of New South Wales

Biography

Cameron is an Associate Professor and Co-Director of Postgraduate Studies, a manager/team leader of the Connected Waters Initiative Research Centre and the Global Water Institute, University of New South Wales-Sydney, as well as a member the Global Risk Governance Programme, University of Cape Town and The National Centre for Groundwater Research and Training. He is also a member of The Australian Panel of Experts on Environmental Law (APEEL).

Cameron publishes widely in the areas of environmental law, natural resources law and water law, with a focus on regulation and governance. Within these fields, he has examined issues of compliance and enforcement, resilience, planning, accountability, democratic participation, deliberative decision making, adaptive management and collaborative governance. In addition to his various articles, book chapters, and policy submissions, Cameron is the author of The New Environmental Governance (with Neil Gunningham and Clifford Shearing, Routledge, 2012) and editor of Trans-jurisdictional Water Law and Governance (with Janice Gray and Rosemary Rayfuse, Earthscan, 2016).

An empirical researcher, Cameron has worked closely with Australian and international government and non-government organisations on a range of environmental and natural resource management research projects. His current research agenda is centred on water law and energy governance, including unconventional gas, renewable energy, water planning, conventional regulation and monitoring of groundwater use. 

In 2014, Cameron was awarded the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Academy of Environmental Law Junior Scholarship Award for his contribution to environmental law scholarship.

He is an Editorial Board member on the Environmental and Planning Law Journal, and in 2016 was the guest editor of a Special Issue of the Environmental and Planning Law Journal (EPLJ Vol 33 Part 4), entitled Rethinking Water Law and Governance. He is currently a PLuS Alliance Fellow and has had former roles as the Deputy Convenor of the Human Research Ethics Advisory Panel B: Arts, Humanities and Law.

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