Professor
David Kinley holds the Chair in Human Rights Law at University of Sydney, and
is the Law Faculty's Associate-Dean (International). He is also an Academic
Panel member of Doughty Street Chambers in London, the UK's leading human
rights practice. He has previously held positions at Cambridge University, The
Australian National University, the University of New South Wales, Washington
College of Law, American University, and was the founding Director of the
Castan Centre for Human Rights Law at Monash University (2000-2005). He was a Senior Fulbright Scholar in 2004, based in
Washington DC, and Herbert Smith Visiting Fellow at the Faculty of Law,
University of Cambridge in 2008. He is author and
editor of eight books and more than 80 articles, book chapters, reports
and papers.
He has worked
for 15 years as a consultant and adviser on international and domestic human
rights law in Vietnam, Indonesia, South Africa, Thailand, Iraq, Nepal, Laos,
China, and Myanmar/Burma, and for such organizations as the UN High
Commissioner for Human Rights, the World Bank, the Ford Foundation, AusAID, and
the Asia Pacific Forum of National Human Rights Institutions, and a number of
transnational corporations, and NGOs.
He has also previously worked for three years with the Australian Law
Reform Commission and two years with the Australian Human Rights Commission.
His
latest publications include the critically acclaimed Civilising Globalisation: Human Rights and the Global Economy (CUP,
2009), Corporations and Human Rights (Ashgate 2009), and The World Trade
Organisation and Human Rights: Interdisciplinary Perspectives (Edward
Elgar, 2009) Another edited collection entitled Principled Engagement: Promoting Human Rights in Pariah States will
be published by UNU Publications in
2011. He is currently working on
another book investigating the interrelations between human rights and global
finance.
David was born in Belfast,
Northern Ireland and brought up there during the 1960s and 70s. He studied in England in the 1980s at
Sheffield Hallam University and the Universities of Sheffield and Cambridge,
and after obtaining his doctorate from the latter in 1990 he moved to
Australia. He now lives in Sydney
with his wife and three children.