New Zealand academic
Karen Nadine Scott is a New Zealand Law academic. She is a full professor at the University of Canterbury.[1] She was elected President of the Australian and New Zealand Society of International Law in June 2019.[2]
Academic career
After completing LLB and LLM degrees at the University of Nottingham, she lectured at Nottingham[3] before moving to the University of Canterbury, where she rose to full professor[1] and head of school.[4] Canterbury was the first law school to have both a female dean (Ursula Cheer) and head of school (Scott).[5]
Scott's research interests include Antarctic law, the law of the sea, environmental law and international trade law.[1][6][7][8][9]
Selected works
- Rothwell, Donald, Alex G. Oude Elferink, Karen N. Scott, and Tim Stephens, eds. The Oxford handbook of the law of the sea. Oxford Handbooks in Law, 2015.
- Hemmings, Alan D., Donald R. Rothwell, and Karen N. Scott, eds. Antarctic security in the twenty-first century: legal and policy perspectives. Routledge, 2012.
- Scott, Karen N. "International law in the anthropocene: responding to the geoengineering challenge." Michigan Journal of International Law 34 (2012): 309.
- Scott, Karen N. "International regulation of undersea noise." International & Comparative Law Quarterly 53, no. 2 (2004): 287–323.
- Scott, Karen N. "Tilting at offshore windmills: regulating wind farm development within the renewable energy zone." Journal of Environmental Law 18, no. 1 (2005): 89–118.
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