Portrait of Dr Allison Lindner

Dr Allison Lindner

About

Dr Allison Lindner is a Lecturer in Law at UCL.

Dr Lindner was formerly an Assistant Lecturer at Kent Law School where she taught Introduction to Obligations (Tort and Contract law), and the Foundations of Property Law.

Previously, Dr Lindner has worked as Legal Researcher at the Commonwealth Secretariat; for various civil society organisations; as part of the team in support of the appellants in the landmark US Supreme Court case, Kiobel v Royal Dutch Petroleum; and as Chair of the Public Interest Environmental Law UK conference.

She is a member of the Socio-Legal Studies Association and the Law and Development Research Network.

Research interests

Dr Lindner is an interdisciplinary legal scholar who works primarily in the field of economic sociology of law. She is interested in understanding the connections between human activity, the environment and the law. She has a longstanding interest in the waste management, textiles and extractives industries.

Her PhD, which she passed in December 2020, was on the implications of international sustainable development law for waste pickers in South Africa. She holds a B.A in International and Comparative Studies from the University of Western Ontario; the Graduate Diploma in Law from the College of Law; and an LLM in International Economic Law from SOAS, University of London.

PhD research project

Project title: Localising International Law: The Implications of Sustainable Development in the Lives of Waste Pickers in South Africa

Project description: This thesis explores the dynamics that occur in a localised setting when sustainable development, an international legal concept, is translated into national laws through an empirical case study involving waste pickers in Johannesburg, South Africa. South Africa is the centre of the empirical examination given that sustainable development is both enshrined as a right in the highly-regarded and progressive South African Constitution, and is the prime objective of many local laws which comprise the waste management regime.

The thesis uses an Economic Sociology of Law (ESL) approach, which considers legal life and economic life as part of wider social life; and conceptualises social life in terms of human rationalities, regimes, actions and interactions. This approach both prompts and facilitates a systematic interrogation of the interplay of the economic, legal and social dimensions of ‘sustainable development’; and of how these dimensions are manifested in the life at local level. Empirical research reveals how stakeholders interact in their experience of the waste management regime aimed at achieving sustainable development. Waste pickers in Johannesburg do not benefit from improved social, economic or environmental conditions because sustainable development is ill-equipped to respond the social dynamics that complicate its operation in South Africa. Symptomatic of this is a lack of recognition of the value of waste pickers’ work, resulting in policies that do not facilitate waste pickers’ full access to waste, and a national recycling rate which is currently 38.6 per cent of all recyclable materials. Policy strategies aimed at achieving sustainable development in the South African waste management economy should address these issues in order to achieve success. This study is important for policy makers and waste pickers, and joins a handful of studies focused on the relationship between international law and the informal waste management economy.

Last updated 17th March 2022