Executive team
Yenny Vega Cárdenas
Presidente
Yenny Vega Cárdenas is a lawyer practising in Canada and Colombia. She holds a Master’s degree in Business Law and a PhD in Water Law. She is a member of the United Nations Expert Network on Harmony with Nature.
Dr. Vega Cárdenas teaches Public Law, Methodology and Comparative International Law at several Canadian universities, as well as the legal aspects of Water Management at the École polytechnique de Montréal. She is a visiting professor at several universities in Latin America. As a researcher with the Global Justice & Human Rights Project, she has conducted in-depth research on the human right to water and sanitation.
As a visiting researcher at the Max Planck Institute for Private International and Comparative Law in Hamburg, Germany, she developed research on the decolonisation of law in relation to the recognition of the rights of Nature. She has published several academic books and articles in English, French and Spanish and is frequently invited to participate in national and international conferences related to her expertise.
Inès Benadda
Vice-Présidente
Inès Benadda graduated in 2020 with a Bachelor of Laws (L.L.B.). and is also Member of the Quebec Bar since January 2023. Recipient of the Lieutenant-Governor’s Medal for youth in 2017, her actions within the Faculty during her degree, namely with the Indigenous Law and Environmental Law committees, reflect her keen interest in the environmental cause.
In the spring of 2018, she completed a summer school in Costa Rica in international and comparative climate change law, where she was able to delve deeper into the rights of Nature, which is of particular interest to her. Her internship at the Centre québécois de l’environnement (2018-2019) allowed her to perfect her legal knowledge of Quebec environmental law.
Inès deeply believes that there is no better time than now to act on environmental issues, and it is in this perspective that she serves as the vice-president of the International Observatory of Nature’s Rights.
Board of directors
Daniel Turp
Head of assemblies and B.D.
Daniel Turp (www.danielturp.quebec) is a graduate of the University of Montreal and the University of Cambridge and holds a doctorate (summa cum laude) from the University of Law, Economics and Social Sciences of Paris (Paris II). In 1989, he earned the prestigious Directed Studies diploma from the Academy of International Law in The Hague.
Mr. Turp is a professor at the Faculty of Law at the University of Montreal. He teaches international public law, international and constitutional human rights law, and advanced constitutional law. He is president of the Association Québécoise de Droit Constitutionnel, the board of directors of the Société Québécoise de Droit International, and the Research Institute on Self-Determination of Peoples and National Independence (IRAI).
Professor Turp was elected member of the House of Commons of Canada where he represented the Bloc Québécois and the riding of Beauharnois-Salaberry between 1997 and 2000. He was also elected member of the National Assembly of Quebec for the Parti Québécois and the riding of Mercier between 2003 and 2008.
He is the author of several books and articles on constitutional and international law, including La Constitution Québécoise.
Alexandra Baer
Member of the Board of directors
Alexandra Baer is working for the International criminal Court. She has obtained a bachelor degree in Law from the Université de Montréal. She joined the Observatory in 2019.
In 2019, she completed a summer school in Costa Rica concerning individual and collective human rights, environmental law, and international and comparative law of indigenous peoples. This experience has made her more aware of the relationship between human beings and nature, which is why she is committed to the International Observatory of Nature’s Rights.
Kayley Laura Lata
Member of the Board of directors
Kayley Laura Lata joined the Observatory team in 2019 as Head of Communications. She subsequently held the position of Political Affairs Officer for almost three years. Her mandate culminated in the presentation of a bill to grant legal personality to the St. Lawrence River. Today, she sits on the Observatory’s Board of Directors.
She holds a bachelor’s degree and a master’s degree in law, and lectures on the rights of Nature to students, elected officials and environmental organizations.