Christopher Campbell-Duruflé
Assistant Professor,
Lincoln Alexander School of Law
Areas of Expertise
- International Law
- Environmental & Climate Law
- Human Rights
- American Human RIghts System
- Sustainable Development
- International Relations
Assistant Professor Campbell-Duruflé teaches class actions, climate law and legal theory at the Lincoln Alexander School of Law. His research focuses on the role of international law in responding to some of the most pressing challenges of our time. He has published on the negotiation of the 2015 Paris Agreement on climate change, appeared before the Senate during the study of the Canadian Net-Zero Emissions Accountability Act, and supported discrimination and Indigenous rights litigation within the Inter-American system.
He is a Fellow of the Cambridge Centre for Environment, Energy and Natural Resource Governance (C-EENRG) and a member of the C-EENRG Research Series (external link) editorial team, and serves on the legal committee of the Centre québécois du droit de l’environnement. (external link)
- An Epitome of Modern Environmentalism: Canada’s Contribution to the ICJ Advisory Opinion on Climate Change (external link)
PKI Global Justice Journal (2025) - A legal standard for state mitigation efforts: is national discretion bound to shrink over time? (external link)
Research handbook on the law of the Paris Agreement (2024)
- The Canadian Net-Zero Emissions Accountability Act: A Tepid Response to the Paris Agreement (external link)
UBC Law Review (2023) - Mainstreaming “One Health” in the Inter-American Human Right System’s pandemic actions
University of Dayton Law Review Online Edition (2023)