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IUCN WCEL Human Rights and the Environment Specialist Group
IUCN COMMISSION GROUP

IUCN WCEL Human Rights and the Environment Specialist Group

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Group leadership

Prof Achinthi VITHANAGE

Professor Achinthi C. Vithanage is the Executive Director of the Pace | Haub Environmental Law Program & Professor of Law for Designated Service in Environmental Law at the Elisabeth Haub School of Law at Pace University, where she teaches, researches, and writes scholarship in the field of international environmental law, and was the recipient of the 2025 Ottinger Award for Faculty Achievement. Professor Vithanage is recognized as one of the United States’ leading environmental and energy lawyers with listings in LawDragon’s inaugural Environmental and Energy Lawyers list in 2021 and in LawDragon’s 500 Leading Environmental Lawyers Guides for 202320242025, and 2026

In addition to chairing the newly formed Human Rights & the Environment Specialist Group of the International Union for Conservation of Nature’s (IUCN) World Commission on Environmental Law, she is the IUCN Faculty Lead for Pace | Haub Environmental Law’s Global Center for Environmental Legal Studies (GCELS), an IUCN member institution, and has served on the Secretariat for the  IUCN Academy of Environmental Law since 2021.

She also co-leads the Climate Change Collaborative Research Network for the Law & Society Association, and is an originating member of the International Association of Energy Law, a global network of early career energy law professors. She serves on several Boards, including the Editorial Advisory Board for the Environmental Law Institute’s Environmental Forum publication, the Editorial Board for Yearbook of International Environmental Law, the Board of Directors of the Federated Conservationists of Westchester County, and the Sustainable Business Law Hub’s Advisory Board. Within the American Bar Association’s Section on Environment Energy & Resources (SEER), she is a member of the Executive Committee and is a member of the Sustainability in Legal Education and Climate Change Task Force. She previously served on SEER Governing Council (2023–2025), co-founded the Environmental Law Society Network and the Law Student Transition Task Force, and is a former Co-Chair of the International Law Committee. She has represented the ABA as its delegate at several Climate Change COPs and Bonn Climate Meetings.

Professor Vithanage’s scholarship ranges across international environmental law and human rights and include publications like “Marine Protected Areas: The Chagos Case and the Need to Marry International Environmental Law with Indigenous Rights” in Brill’s Yearbook of Polar Law (2012), “Resource Wars: A Conflict of Interests in the Bering Sea Climate Resilience Area” in ABA SEER’s Natural Resources & Environment (2017), and “Addressing Correlations Between Gender-Based Violence and Climate Change: An Expanded Role for International Climate Change Law and Education for Sustainable Development” in the Pace Environmental Law Review (2021). She recently published “The Agreement and International Environmental Law” in Brill’s The Agreement on Marine Biodiversity of Areas Beyond National Jurisdiction: Commentary and Analysis (2025) and is preparing a chapter on Ocean Defenders in a forthcoming book on environmental defenders. She is also co-editing several forthcoming publications, including a Handbook on Essential Concepts of Human Rights and the Environment (2028)a Handbook on Environmental Human Rights (2029), and an Encyclopedia on Climate Change Law (2029).

Previously, she was a Visiting Associate Professor of Law at the George Washington University Law School in Washington D.C. Professor Vithanage was born in Sri Lanka, lived in the United Arab Emirates, practiced as an attorney in the state of New South Wales (NSW) in Australia, and undertook tertiary studies in Australia, Japan, China, Spain, and the United States, providing her a unique international perspective.

Professor Achinthi C. Vithanage is the Executive Director of the Pace | Haub Environmental Law Program & Professor of Law for Designated Service in Environmental Law at the Elisabeth Haub School of ...

Ms LORENA CORDERO
Deputy Chair

Lorena Cordero is an environmental lawyer specializing in climate change, energy, and natural resources law, with a strong focus on human rights–based approaches to environmental governance. She currently serves as Environmental Policy Coordinator at Conservation International Peru. In academia, she is a lecturer at the Faculty of Law of Universidad Científica del Sur, where she teaches Sustainable Development and contributes to the postgraduate Environmental Law Master’s Programme, and at the Faculty of Law of Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú (PUCP), where she teaches academic research.

Her experience spans environmental regulation, climate and energy policy, and enforcement across public institutions, international organizations, and civil society. She has worked with global initiatives such as C40 Cities Climate Leadership Group on urban climate policy and with Student Energy on advancing youth-led energy transition efforts. She has contributed to multi-level governance processes across Latin America, particularly in areas such as air quality, sustainable mobility, and social inclusion.

Lorena has led legal responses to oil spills in the Peruvian Amazon, working closely with Indigenous communities and subnational authorities, and has supported the development of national climate and energy policies, including energy transition strategies. She has also been actively involved in the design and implementation of carbon markets and REDD+ projects, integrating safeguards and rights-based approaches.

Her current research focuses on glacier recession and its human rights impacts on Indigenous communities, as well as the effectiveness of enforcement mechanisms in biodiversity policies, particularly in coastal wetlands. She also explores energy transition governance within the Andean Community, examining regulatory and institutional frameworks for sustainable energy integration in the region.

Through her academic work, she contributes to strategic litigation and capacity building at the Environmental Litigation Clinic of Universidad Científica del Sur, focusing on environmental justice and human rights. She is the recipient of the 2025 Sustainable Leadership Recognition awarded by Solidaritas in the Master’s category for Sustainable Cities and Communities (SDG 11) and Partnerships for the Goals (SDG 17). She obtained her law degree from the Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú (PUCP) and holds a Master of Public Administration in Energy, Technology, and Climate Policy from University College London (UCL).

Lorena Cordero is an environmental lawyer specializing in climate change, energy, and natural resources law, with a strong focus on human rights–based approaches to environmental governance. She ...