
University of Melbourne
Always clear, concise, and insightful.
Makes learning exciting and meaningful.
Always goes above and beyond for students.
A true mentor who cares about success.
Great Professor!
Professor Jacqueline Peel is the Redmond Barry Distinguished Professor at Melbourne Law School, University of Melbourne, and serves as Director of Melbourne Climate Futures, the university's multidisciplinary initiative connecting climate research across disciplines to foster positive outcomes. She is a leading, internationally recognised expert in environmental and climate change law, with scholarship covering international, transnational, and national perspectives, alongside interdisciplinary explorations of the law/science relationship and risk regulation in environmental governance. Peel holds the degrees of Bachelor of Science and Bachelor of Laws (Honours I) from the University of Queensland, and a PhD in Law from the University of Melbourne obtained in 2006. Her career trajectory includes appointments as Associate Dean of Melbourne Law Masters from 2016 to 2018, Visiting Scholar at Berkeley Law School's Centre for Law, Energy and the Environment, and Visiting Scholar at Stanford University's Water in the West program from 2012 to 2015.
Peel's prolific publication record features seminal works such as The Oxford Handbook of International Environmental Law (edited with Lavanya Rajamani, Oxford University Press, 2021), Climate Change Litigation: Regulatory Pathways to Cleaner Energy (with Hari Osofsky, Cambridge University Press, 2015), Principles of International Environmental Law (fourth edition with Philippe Sands, Cambridge University Press, 2018), Environmental Law: Scientific, Policy and Regulatory Dimensions (second edition with Lee Godden and Jan McDonald, Oxford University Press, 2012), Science and Risk Regulation in International Law (Cambridge University Press, 2010), and The Precautionary Principle in Practice (Federation Press, 2005). Her contributions have garnered major awards, including the 2024 ARC Kathleen Fitzpatrick Australian Laureate Fellowship for her project transforming international law to enhance corporate climate accountability, Fellowship of the Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia (2019), Fulbright Scholarship, NYU Hauser Scholarship, and the Morrison Prize in 2018 for her article on energy partisanship. Peel has held influential roles as a lead author for Working Group III (mitigation) of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change's Sixth Assessment Report, and as a member of an international legal expert group convened by TESS and UNEP on trade and climate interactions. She has delivered prominent public lectures, including the 2016 Mahla Pearlman Oration in Environmental Law and a teaching engagement at the Hague Academy of International Law on climate change and international law in 2022, underscoring her impact on academic discourse and policy.
Professional Email: jpeel@unimelb.edu.au