Passionate about student development.
Always fair, encouraging, and motivating.
Inspires a love for learning in everyone.
Inspires a love for learning in everyone.
Dr. Steven White serves as a Senior Lecturer at Griffith Law School, Griffith University, specializing in animal law and property law. His research examines critical aspects of animal protection, including the regulation of animal welfare in Australia, the role of international law in safeguarding animal interests, the legal status of companion animals, standards in companion animal welfare, and the intersection of law and policy in addressing human-wildlife conflicts. White coordinates and delivers the undergraduate elective course Animal Law (5069LAW), which explores legal frameworks for animal protection and has contributed to the establishment of animal law education within Australian universities. Admitted as a solicitor of the Supreme Court of Queensland, he brings practical legal experience to his academic role. White has actively participated in public and academic discourse on animal law, including opening keynote events such as the Voiceless Animal Law Lecture and providing expert commentary on regulatory issues in animal welfare.
Steven White's scholarly output demonstrates substantial influence in the field, with over 550 citations on Google Scholar. Key publications include the co-edited volume Animal Law and Welfare: International Perspectives (Springer, 2016) with Deborah Cao, offering comparative insights into global animal law regimes. His article Into the Void: International Law and the Protection of Animal Welfare appeared in Global Policy (2013), critiquing deficiencies in existing international protections. Other significant works encompass Regulation of Animal Welfare in Australia and the Emergent Commonwealth: Entrenching the Traditional Approach of the States and Territories or Laying the Ground for Reform? (2007); Companion Animals: Members of the Family or Legally Discarded Objects? (2009); Standards and Standard-Setting in Companion Animal Welfare (2016); and A Review of the Role of Law and Policy in Human-Wildlife Conflict (2021). He also co-edited Animal Law in Australasia: A New Dialogue and contributed chapters such as Animal Protection Law in Australia: Bound by History (2016) and Exploring Different Philosophical Approaches to Animal Protection in Law (2013). These contributions highlight his ongoing examination of historical, regulatory, and philosophical dimensions of animal law.
