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Associate Professor
Centre for European, Comparative, and Constitutional Legal Studies
Karen Blixens Plads 16, 2300 København S, 6A Bygning 6A (Afsnit 3), Building: 6A-4-27
Member of:
Miriam is Co-Director of the Centre for Comparative, European, and Constitutional Legal Studies. Her research focus is human rights, social sustainability, and critical perspectives on international law. Miriam currently leads a project for the Danish Institute for Human Rights on the realisation of the right to highest attainable standard of mental and physical health in Greenland, where she and her family lived in 2023. She also leads a project funded by the Independent Research Fund Denmark which examines climate and disaster resilience in the context of law and colonialism, with particular focus on Greenland and the Cook Islands. Miriam is Principal Investigator on the project "'Climate Refugees' in the Nordic Region? Legal and Policy Responses to New Patterns of Human Mobility". She sits on the Advisory Committee to the Platform on Disaster Displacement and co-founded the Nordic Network on Climate Related Displacement and Mobility. Miriam is from Aotearoa New Zealand.
Teaching
- Course director - Indigeneity, Law, and Nature (2023 - )
- Course director - Climate Change and Human Rights (Ilisimatusarfik / University of Greenland, 2023)
- Course director - Climate Change, Disaster, and Human Mobility (2020-)
- Course director - Migration and Forced Displacement from Climate Change (2018 - )
- Lecturer – International Migration Law
- Lecturer – Public International Law
- Lecturer – International Criminal Law (2013-2015)
Miriam also lectures in other Faculties at KU as part of the Masters of Disaster Management; the Masters of Advanced Migration Studies; and the Masters of Climate Change.
Previous experience
Prior to joining the Faculty at KU, Miriam represented the Australian Government on the Third Committee of the United Nations General Assembly, having independently negotiated a range of human rights resolutions, including those on the rights of migrants, social development, and extreme poverty. Miriam has been a consultant to the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime and was a Visiting Professional in the Immediate Office of the Prosecutor at the International Criminal Court in 2015. She has managed Parliamentary Committee Inquiries in the Legislative Council of the New South Wales Parliament, as well as Law Reform Inquiries for the Victorian Law Reform Commission. She has also held positions in the International Legal Division, and the International Security Division and the Afghanistan Desk of the Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade.
Education
Miriam holds a PhD from Copenhagen University, a Master of Laws (International Law) and a Graduate Diploma in Legal Practice from the Australian National University, and a Bachelor of Laws and Bachelor of Arts (Politics) (First Class Honours) from Monash University. She is admitted to practice as an Australian Legal Practitioner in the Supreme Court of the Australian Capital Territory.
ID: 49763128
Most downloads
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885
downloads
Climate Change, Colonialism and Human Rights in Greenland
Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Book chapter › Research › peer-review
Accepted/In press -
432
downloads
Climate Change and Human Rights in the Overseas Colonized Territories of the State
Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Book chapter › Research › peer-review
Published -
358
downloads
Eaten by the Sea: Human Rights Claims for the Impacts of Climate Change upon Remote Subnational Communities
Research output: Contribution to journal › Journal article › Research › peer-review
Published