Amelia Thorpe

Associate Professor

Amelia Thorpe is Associate Professor and Director of Postgraduate Studies in Law. Amelia works in planning, property and environmental law, with an emphasis on social and environmental justice. Her approach is sociolegal and interdisciplinary, drawing on professional experience in planning and urban development and in public interest environmental law. Amelia has a particular interest in the governance of streets and is currently leading research on food delivery cyclists funded by the Office of Road Safety.

Amelia is the author of Owning the Street: The Everyday Life of Property (MIT Press, 2020) and articles in journals including Journal of Law & Society, Law & Society Review, Social & Legal Studies, Planning Theory & Practice and Urban Studies. Her essays and commentary have appeared in The Conversation, Griffith Review, The Guardian and The Sydney Morning Herald, among other venues. Some of Amelia’s publications can be downloaded freely at: http://ssrn.com/author=2832516 and reviews of Owning the Street can be found in Contemporary Sociology; Emotion, Space & Society; Journal of Sociology; Landscape Journal; Legalities; and Planning Theory.

Amelia is co-editor of Australian Planner, the journal of record for the Planning Institute of Australia (PIA), and serves on the editorial board of Environmental & Planning Law Journal. She also serves on the City of Sydney Local Planning Panel and the board of Shelter NSW, and was founding co-chair of the PIA NSW Women in Planning Network, leading the development of Australia’s first national gender equity policy for the planning profession. Amelia has also served on numerous bodies focused on inclusion and diversity at UNSW, including as co-chair of the UNSW Women in Research Network, chair of the Equity, Diversity and Inclusion Committee in Law and Deputy Academic Lead of Athena Swan.

Amelia joined UNSW Law in 2012, having worked previously as a director at the Environmental Defender’s Office, Australia’s largest and oldest public interest environmental law organisation. Amelia led the EDO’s legal outreach programs, including indigenous and community engagement in NSW and a capacity-building program for environmental law in the Pacific region, working primarily on climate change at national and international levels.

Before Law Amelia studied Architecture and City Policy, and worked for the planning, transport and housing departments in Western Australia. This included the award-winning TravelSmart and Liveable Neighbourhoods programs, as well as New Metro Rail, then the largest infrastructure project ever undertaken in the state, and Dialogue with the City, a deliberative planning process involving more than 1,000 people. A particular interest in the policy and regulatory aspects of urban development led her to study law. Amelia completed law degrees at the University of Oxford and at Harvard Law School and, later, a PhD at ANU.

Amelia has three young children and works part time.

Amelia's teaching has been recognized with a Distinguished Environmental Law Education Award from the IUCN Academy of Environmental Law, a UNSW Vice-Chancellor's Award for Teaching Excellence, and a Lexis Nexis Legal Innovation Award.

Courses taught

Cities, Planning, Law and Justice (LAWS3073)

Land and Environment Court Clinic (LAWS3302)

Land Law (LAWS2383)

Development and Planning Law (LAWS8071)

Food Law (LAWS3216)

Principles of Private Law (LAWS1150)

Climate Law (LAWS8066)

Journal articles
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Beck B; Thorpe A; Timperio A; Giles-Corti B; William C; de Leeuw E; Christian H; Corben K; Stevenson M; Backhouse M; Ivers R; Hayek R; Raven R; Bolton S; Ameratunga S; Shilton T; Zapata-Diomedi B, 2022, 'Active transport research priorities for Australia', Journal of Transport and Health, vol. 24, http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jth.2021.101288
2022
Thorpe A, 2021, '"This Land is Yours": Ownership and Agency in the Sharing City', Journal of Law and Society, https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/toc/10.1111/(ISSN)1467-6478.2021-SLSA-Conference
2021
Thorpe A, 2021, 'Reclaiming the Streets? Possibilities for Post-Pandemic Public Space', Town Planning Review, vol. 92, http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/tpr.2020.36
2021
Thorpe A; Williamson S, 2021, 'Trusted institutions: Expertise, gender, and legitimacy on planning panels', Australian Journal of Public Administration, pp. 1 - 7, http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1467-8500.12511
2021
Morgan B; Thorpe A; Cooper D, 2021, 'The hopeful edges of power: Radical governance and acting ‘as if’', Griffith Review, vol. 73, pp. 233 - 245, http://dx.doi.org/10.25904/1912/4266
2021
Thorpe A, 2021, 'Regulatory Gentrification: Documents, displacement and the loss of low-income housing', Urban Studies, vol. 58, pp. 2623 - 2639, http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0042098020960569
2021
Morgan B; Thorpe A, 2018, 'Introduction: Law for a new economy: Enterprise, sharing, regulation', Journal of Law and Society, vol. 45, pp. 1 - 9, http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jols.12075
2018
Thorpe A, 2018, 'Pop-up Property: Enacting ownership from San Francisco to Sydney', Law and Society Review, vol. 52, pp. 740 - 772, http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/lasr.12347
2018
Thorpe A, 2018, '"This Land is Yours": Ownership and Agency in the Sharing City', Journal of Law and Society, vol. 45, pp. 99 - 115, http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jols.12081
2018
Thorpe A, 2018, 'Hegel's Hipsters: Claiming Ownership in the Contemporary City', SOCIAL & LEGAL STUDIES, vol. 27, pp. 25 - 48, http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0964663917701304
2018
Thorpe A, 2017, 'Rethinking Participation, Rethinking Planning', Planning Theory & Practice, vol. 18, pp. 566 - 582, http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14649357.2017.1371788
2017
Thorpe AL, 2013, 'Planning with the Public? Participation in the reform of the NSW planning system', Alternative Law Journal, pp. 272 - 272
2013
Thorpe AL, 2013, 'Public participation in planning: Lessons from the green bans', Environmental and Planning Law Journal, vol. 30, pp. 93 - 105
2013
Thorpe AL; Hart MA, 2013, 'Changing Climates, Changing Cities? Planning Reform and Urban Sustainability in New South Wales', The Australasian Journal of Natural Resources Law and Policy, vol. 16, pp. 133 - 156, http://search.informit.com.au/documentSummary;dn=204711638848451;res=IELHSS
2013
Thorpe A, 2013, 'Planning with the Public?', Alternative Law Journal, vol. 38, pp. 272 - 273, http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1037969x1303800415
2013
Thorpe AL, 2012, 'Country Profile: Australia', Carbon and Climate Law Review, pp. 261 - 261
2012
Thorpe AT, 2012, 'Too little, too soon? An assessment of Australian carbon capture and storage legislation against the new standards set for the Clean Development Mechanism', Climate Law, vol. 3, pp. 139 - 163, http://dx.doi.org/10.3233/CL-2012-060
2012
Thorpe AL; Graham K, 2009, 'Green Buildings: Are codes, standards and targets sufficient drivers of sustainability in NSW?', Environmental and Planning Law Journal, vol. 26, pp. 486 - 497
2009
Thorpe AL; Graham K, 2009, 'Community-based Monitoring, Reporting and Verification of REDD Projects', Carbon and Climate Law Review, vol. 3, pp. 303
2009
Thorpe A, 2008, 'Tort-Based Climate Change Litigation and the Political Question Doctrine', Journal of Land Use and Environmental Law, vol. 24, pp. 79 - 105, https://heinonline.org/HOL/LandingPage?handle=hein.journals/jluenvl24&div=6&id=&page=
2008
Thorpe A, 1999, 'Version to Version: ARM’s Architecture Revisited for a New Landscape', Kerb, pp. 23 - 33
1999
Thorpe A, 1999, 'Déjà vu: Memory in Architecture', Architectural Theory Review, vol. 4, pp. 64 - 73
1999
Reports
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Dagraville R; Anwar M; Tomka K; Thorpe A; Kuch D; Milton A; Hasan K; McGrath B; Meegahapola L; Tirunagari S; Jalili M; Newman P; Verschuer M; Economou D; James B; Hargroves C; Mouritz M; Dwyer S; Nagrath K; Paevere P; Spak B; Pellow M; Chhaya S; Barnfather P; Jafari B; Fick J, 2021, Electric vehicles and the grid, https://www.racefor2030.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/N1-EV-Opportunity-Assessement-Report-FINAL_04112021.pdf
2021
Thorpe A; McCabe A; Johnson C; Hobbs E; Bailey M; Hartigan M, 2021, Developing a national gender equity policy for the planning profession: A discussion paper, Planning Institute of Australia, https://www.planning.org.au/documents/item/11266
2021
Lee A; McCabe G; Thorpe A; Gibbs R; Bondfield R, 2021, Measuring and Evaluating Extended Outdoor Dining, Sydney
2021
Reinmuth G; Crabtree L; Jackson B; Lee A; Perry N; Scheule H; Thorpe A, 2020, Creating the City We Want: Tackling the Barriers to Housing Diversity in NSW, Sydney
2020
McCabe A; Grech E; Thorpe A, 2020, Post Approval Social Impact Management Review: Discussion Paper
2020
Thorpe AL, 2017, Submission to the NSW Government on the 'Planning legislation updates 2017
2017
Thorpe A; Holley C, 2016, Submission to the NSW Government on 'Revised Consultative Committee Guidelines for State Significant Projects'
2016
Thorpe AL, 2014, Submission to the Productivity Commission on the 'Access to Justice Arrangements Draft Report'
2014
Thorpe AL; Hart M, 2014, Submission to the NSW Government on the 'BASIX Target Review'
2014
Thorpe AL, 2013, Submission to the NSW Government on the 'New Planning System for NSW White Paper, Planning Bill 2013 and Planning (Administration) Bill 2013'
2013
Thorpe AL, 2013, Submission to the Productivity Commission on the 'Major Project Development Assessment Processes Issues Paper'
2013
Thorpe A; Holley C; Sherry C, 2012, Submission to the NSW Government on the New Planning System for NSW Green Paper, Australia
2012
Thorpe AL, 2011, Staying on Track: Tackling Corruption Risks in Climate Change, United Nations Development Program, http://www.undp.org/content/undp/en/home/librarypage/democratic-governance/anti-corruption/staying-on-track--tackling-corruption-risks-in-climate-change.html
2011
Other
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Thorpe A, 2021, Informal urbanism in Sydney: Privilege, precarity, politics, Henry Halloran Trust, University of Sydney, https://www.sydney.edu.au/content/dam/corporate/documents/henry-halloran-trust/festival-of-urbanism-review.pdf
2021
Book Chapters
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Flynn A; Thorpe A, 2021, 'Pandemic pop-ups and the performance of legality', in Doucet B; van Melik R; Filion P (ed.), Global Reflections on Covid-19 and Urban Inequalities, Bristol University Press, Bristol, https://bristoluniversitypress.co.uk/volume-3-public-space-and-mobility
2021
Thorpe AL, 2017, 'Between rights in the city and the right to the city: Heritage, character and public participation in urban planning', in Durbach A; Lixinski L (ed.), Heritage, Culture and Rights: Challenging legal discourses, Hart, Univ New South Wales, Sydney, AUSTRALIA, pp. 121 - 147, http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=PARTNER_APP&SrcAuth=LinksAMR&KeyUT=WOS:000424085200006&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=ALL_WOS&UsrCustomerID=891bb5ab6ba270e68a
2017
Thorpe AL; Stickells L; Moore T, 2017, 'Pop-up justice? Reflecting on relationships in the temporary city', in Hennebury J (ed.), Transience and Permanence in Urban Development, Wiley, pp. 151 - 169, http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9781119055662.ch10
2017
Thorpe AL, 2016, 'Land Use Planning', in The Environmental Law Handbook - Planning and Land Use in New South Wales, edn. 6th, Thomson Reuters
2016
Submissions to Government
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Thorpe A, 2021, Submission to the Greater Sydney Parklands White Paper
2021
Books
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Thorpe A, 2020, Owning the Street: The Everyday Life of Property, MIT Press, Cambridge, MA, https://mitpress.mit.edu/books/owning-street
2020
Conference Papers
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Thorpe AL; Stickells L, 2014, 'Beyond Protest: Activism and participation in 1970s Sydney', in Gjerde M; Petrovic E (ed.), UHPH_14: Landscapes and Ecologies of Urban and Planning History Proceedings of the 12th Australasian Urban History/Planning History Conference, Australasian Urban History/Planning History Group and Victoria University of Wellington, Victoria University of Wellington, NZ, pp. 797 - 814, presented at 12th Australasian Urban History/Planning History Conference, Victoria University of Wellington, NZ, 02 February 2014 - 02 February 2014
2014
Preprints
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Thorpe A, Pop-up Property: Enacting Ownership from San Francisco to Sydney, http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3503159
Thorpe A; Moore T; Stickells L, Pop-Up Justice? Reflecting on Relationships in the Temporary City, http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3072130
Thorpe A, Hegel's Hipsters: Claiming Ownership in the Contemporary City, http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3071552

Australian Legal Research Awards, Honourable mention (book award), 2022

Socio Legal Studies Association (UK), History and Theory Prize, shortlisted, 2022

Centre for Canadian Architecture, Visting Fellowship, 2020 (not taken due to Covid)

People's Choice Award, UNSW Presidents Awards, 2017 (WiRN Executive Committee)

Legal Innovation Index (winner, individual category), 2016

Lawyers Weekly Women in Law Awards, Academic of the Year (finalist), 2016

Vice-Chancellor’s Award for Teaching Excellence (early career), 2014

Australian and New Zealand Law and History Society prize, 2014

Distinguished Environmental Law Education Award (junior category), IUCN Academy, 2014

Salzburg Global Fellow, 2013

Future Thought Leader, HC Coombs Policy Forum, Australian National University, 2012

Saltonstall Scholarship, Harvard Law School, 2006

'Improving Safety for Bicycle Delivery Cyclists', Department of Infrastructure, Transport, Regional Development and Communications, Road Safety Innovation Fund Round 2, 2021-2023 (with Soufiane Boufous and Marilyn Johnson), $227,450

‘Electric Vehicle and Grid - Assessment Opportunity’, Reliable, Affordable, Clean Energy for 2030 Collaborative Research Centre, 2020 (with R Dargaville, D Kuch, l Meegahapola, L McIntosh, P Newman, P Paevere, CSIRO and 16 industry partners) $526,000

'Electric Vehicle Charging Infrastructure – Risks and Opportunities in Urban and Electricity System Planning' Digital Grid Futures Institute, 2020, $25,000 (with Declan Kuch and Nofar Sheffi)

'Paint, posts and productive polities: (re)constructing city-citizen relationships in the street', Centre for Canadian Architecture, Research Fellowship, 2020 (approx. $20,000) (deferred due to Covid-19)

‘Creating the City we Want: Tackling the Barriers to Housing Diversity in NSW’, Collaborative Research Project, Landcom University Roundtable, 2018-2020, $153,510 (with Gerard Reinmuth, Brooke Jackson, Harry Scheule and Adrian Lee, UTS, and Louise Crabtree and Neil Perry, WSU)

‘Urban renewal and the privatisation of public space: implications for democracy and equity’, Cross-Faculty Research Grant, 2018, $9,853 (with Luke McNamara, Laura Crommelin, Alyce McGovern, Chris Martin, Nofar Sheffi and Philip Wadds)

‘6th Fordham International and Comparative Urban Law Conference’ Law Workshop Support Scheme, 2018, $3,750 (with Cathy Sherry)

'Planning, Parking and the Practice of Property', UNSW Law Research Fellowship, 2018 (in-kind, $25,000 equivalent)

‘Constituting Cities: Multi-disciplinary perspectives on the governance of urban spaces’ Law Workshop Support Scheme, 2017, $8,000 (with Luke McNamara)

‘Co-Producing Multi-Media Resources for Environmental Law’, UNSW Learning and Teaching Innovation Grant, 2014, $25,000 (with Cameron Holley)

‘Reducing Corruption Risks in Climate Change’, United Nations Development Programme, 2010, US$24,000

‘Negotiation Training for Multilateral Environmental Agreements’, Secretariat for the Pacific Regional Environment Programme, 2010, US$5,000

urban governance, socio-legal studies, cities, infrastructure, transport, planning law, legal geography

Thorpe A; Kuch D; Adams S, 2021, On an electric car road trip around NSW, we found range anxiety (and the need for more chargers) is real, https://theconversation.com/on-an-electric-car-road-trip-around-nsw-we-found-range-anxiety-and-the-need-for-more-chargers-is-real-154071
2021
Thorpe A, 2020, Reclaiming the streets? We all can have a say in the ‘new normal’ after coronavirus, https://theconversation.com/reclaiming-the-streets-we-all-can-have-a-say-in-the-new-normal-after-coronavirus-137703
2020
Thorpe A, 2019, Labor pledges $14m funding boost to Environmental Defenders Offices – what do these services do?, https://theconversation.com/labor-pledges-14m-funding-boost-to-environmental-defenders-offices-what-do-these-services-do-114360
2019
Thorpe A, 2018, How to write a planning submission, https://innersydneyvoice.org.au/wp-content/uploads/ISV_SPRING2018_web.pdf
2018
Thorpe A, 2018, The case for parklets
2018
Thorpe A, 2017, Bush democracy wins out but council mergers continue in Sydney, https://theconversation.com/bush-democracy-wins-out-but-council-mergers-continue-in-sydney-73118
2017
2017
Thorpe A, 2017, People love parklets, and businesses can help make them happen, https://theconversation.com/people-love-parklets-and-businesses-can-help-make-them-happen-87172
2017
Thorpe A, 2016, A Day for Turning Parking Spaces into Pop-up Parks, https://theconversation.com/a-day-for-turning-parking-spaces-into-pop-up-parks-65164
2016
Thorpe A, 2016, Why parking spaces are being turned into pop-up parks, https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2016/sep/15/a-day-for-turning-parking-spaces-into-pop-up-parks
2016
Thorpe A, 2014, The Block shows up limitations in definition of ownership, https://www.smh.com.au/opinion/the-block-shows-up-limitations-in-definition-of-ownership-20140707-zsz49.html
2014
Thorpe A, 2012, Environmental defenders under attack: why funding must be restored, https://theconversation.com/environmental-defenders-under-attack-why-funding-must-be-restored-10484
2012