Welcome to the National Environmental Law Association

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Membership of the National Environmental Law Association of Australia (NELA) offers an effective way for practitioners and students to keep pace with developments in environmental law and policy maintaining a multi-disciplinary perspective.

 Upcoming events

News

The International Union for Conversation of Nature (IUCN) invites applications for the position of Environmental Legal Advisor, based at the IUCN Regional Office for Oceania in Suva, Fiji.

This position is funded by AusAID via the Australian Volunteers International program. The objectives of this volunteer placement are: (1) to support biodiversity conservation and sustainable development by providing legal assistance and capacity building to governments and non-government organisations in the Pacific Islands regions; and (2) to contribute to the ongoing development of the IUCN Regional Environmental Law Program for Oceania, and the establishment of an IUCN Pacific Centre for Environmental Governance, by assisting with strategic planning and project development.

For more information, including the full position description, please visit: www.australianvolunteers.com/work/index.asp?artid=2979&menuid=170

RMLA Publications

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This section will contain various RMLA publications.

Environmental and Planning Law Association

No EPLA conference information available at this time.

NELA's International Linkages

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In line with its objective of promoting an understanding of the role of environmental law in Australia, the National Environmental Law Association is also actively working to develop relationships with similar organisations overseas in an endeavour to build NELA's international profile.

NELA currently enjoys a strong relationship with the Resource Management Law  Association of  New Zealand (RMLA) which will be strengthened in the near future following agreement of both Associations to sign a Memorandum of Understanding to outline our approach to reciprocal membership rights across the organisations, and provide some guidelines around publishing articles in our respective journals. It is intended that the MoU will signal the beginning of a much deeper relationship with the RMLA at an Executive level as well as opening up some dialogue amongst the membership of both bodies. As an immediate result of this relationship between the two organisations, NELA Members are being offered a special subscription rate to purchase Volume 5 of the RMLA's Resource Management Theory & Practice which will be available in November 2008. The aim if the journal is to provide a vehicle for in-depth analysis of resource management issues relevant to the New Zealand and Australian scene. Folume 5 focuses on the impacts of socio-economic and scientific change on resource management.

Information about the work of RMLA, access to its newsletters and an order form for the Resource Management Theory & Practice journal can be found at www.rmla.org.nz. (Order form can also be accessed via the link below.)

NELA is a member of the IUCN, the World Conservation Union, one of the 39 members in the OCEANIA region, and a member of the Australian Committee for IUCN which is located in Sydney. IUCN has a membership of more than 1,000 organisations from 147 countries spread across its eight statutory regions. The largest group of members represents non-governmental bodies, with other members representing government organisations and affiliates. NELA receives regular journals and information on the work of IUCN. 

Further afield, links are being developed between NELA and the American and Canadian Bar Associations through their respective sections on environment, energy and resources. NELA President, Robyn Glindemann, has had discussions with relevant executives in both organisations and there was universal interest in developing links between the CBA, ABA and NELA. Initially, these links will be fairly simple, for example linking websites and exchanging relevant information about environmental laws and law reform between our groups. But the intention is for the relationship to grow over time and may include things like providing articles for publication in our respective journals.  As evidence of these developing relationships, Robyn Glindemann recently travelled to Ottawa, Canada to attend and give a keynote address at the Air Quality and Climate Change Summit co-hosted by the Canadian Bar Association's National Environmental, Energy and Resources Law Section and the American Bar Association's Section of Environment, Energy and Resources.

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