Journal article
Environmental damage as a threat to national security: Australia's legal vulnerability to enviro-terrorism and enviro-sabotage
Public Law Review , Vol.34(1), pp.26-47
06/2023
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Abstract
This article examines whether Australia’s domestic criminal laws effectively address the threat of environmental damage that is intended to undermine our national security. It focuses on two specific types of conduct – enviro-terrorism (destruction of the natural environment to further the political and/or ideological agendas of terrorist organisations) and enviro-sabotage (damage to the environment caused by foreign powers seeking to harm Australia’s national security). Through an analysis of Australia’s federal sabotage offences, state and territory sabotage offences and crimes under environmental protection legislation, the article shows that Australia’s domestic laws fail to adequately protect Australia’s diverse and irreplaceable natural environment from deliberate attack by terrorists or foreign powers. The article concludes by making recommendations for law reform to better protect Australia’s natural environment from attacks intended to undermine our national security.
Details
- Title
- Environmental damage as a threat to national security: Australia's legal vulnerability to enviro-terrorism and enviro-sabotage
- Creators
- Sarah Kendall - University of QueenslandBrendan Walker-Munro - University of Queensland
- Publication Details
- Public Law Review , Vol.34(1), pp.26-47
- Publisher
- Lawbook Co.
- Identifiers
- 991013167313002368
- Academic Unit
- Faculty of Business, Law and Arts
- Language
- English
- Resource Type
- Journal article