Public Law Events Roundup June 2022

Welcome to the June edition of the AUSPUBLAW Australian Public Law Events Roundup. We would firstly like to draw your attention to the following applications, calls for papers, submissions and nominations:

Applications open: Roles in AG’s Department to assist with Proposed Voice Referendum

Applications close: 14 June 2022

The Office of Constitutional Law in the Attorney-General’s Department is currently recruiting for lawyers to assist with the proposed referendum for a Voice to Parliament.

For more information and to apply, click here.

Call for Nominations: The Saunders Prize for Excellence in Scholarship in Constitutional Law

Nominations close: 20 June 2022

The AACL is delighted to announce its call for nominations for the annual Saunders Prize. The Saunders Prize is named in honour of Laureate Professor Cheryl Saunders AO, in recognition of her exceptional eminence in constitutional law and her leadership in the creation of the AACL. The Prize will be awarded to the author of an article or note on a subject of constitutional law, published in an Australian legal journal in the preceding calendar year, which, in the opinion of the Panel, reflects the highest standards of research and scholarship.

The AACL is pleased to announce that the winner of the Saunders Prize in 2022 will be awarded $1000.

The rules governing the Saunders Prize are available here.

Nominations should take the following form:

- A nominated article should be sent by way of e-mail attachment to the AACL Council at secretariat@aacl.asn.au (with the subject line “Saunders Prize”).

- The article should be in the form in which it was published. Manuscripts in other forms will not be accepted.

- In addition, a covering letter should be included containing the details of the nominating party and (if different) the article’s author. The covering letter should also confirm that the article was published in an Australian legal journal in 2021.

- An article may be nominated by an individual or by a law journal. However, each individual and each law journal is limited to one nomination.

Call for Workshop Submissions - Inspiring Legal Research: New Scholarly Horizons and Career Pathways
University of Sydney Law School
Submissions close: 20 June 2022, 5:00pm (AEST)
Workshop dates: 12-13 August 2022
Workshop location: University of Sydney Law School

On 12-13 August 2022 the Sydney Law School will host a workshop showcasing research by undergraduate, Juris Doctor and Masters students studying at law schools around Australia and New Zealand. If you are currently doing or have recently completed an honours thesis, an independent research project or substantial research paper as part of your law degree, we invite you to present your research and meet other students, scholars, and practitioners.

Apart from presenting your work, the workshop will give you the opportunity to think about how to disseminate it by turning it into a journal article or making a contribution to policy formulation and law reform.  The invited speakers will also discuss the reasons for doing an advanced research degree in law, such as a PhD, and the career pathways it can open up.

The research presentations will be organised around topic areas with a prize awarded to the best paper and the best presentation. We invite research projects in all areas of law including private law, regulatory law, public and constitutional law, international and comparative law.

Students who are unable to obtain financial support from their home institution for attending the workshop can apply for a travel stipend.

Expressions of interest to participate in the workshop are based on the submission of an abstract.

For more information, and to submit an abstract, click here.

Call for Papers - Teaching Material: The Pedagogy of Political Economy in Australian Law Schools
Julius Stone Institute of Jurisprudence, University of Sydney Law School
CfP closes: 30 June 2022
Symposium dates: 29-30 November 2022
Symposium location: In-person

As legal academics, we believe that providing students with the tools to understand and critique the legal arrangements underpinning Australia’s political economy should be a central goal of legal education. Many young adults feel excluded from old expectations of prosperity and perpetual growth, and from a political economic system built upon them. At the same time, legal education leaves many students dissatisfied, as it frequently does not provide them with the tools and vocabularies they seek to articulate their frustrations and work toward their resolution.

We are particularly interested in contributions that explore:
- The history of critical legal education in Australia from a political economic perspective
- Indigenous legal orders and the political economy of settler law
- The impact of national and international political economy on Australian legal education (content and structure)
- Contemporary examples of courses that adopt a progressive political economic lens
- Practical recommendations on how to incorporate progressive insights on political economy into the Priestley Eleven and other commonly compulsory courses (for example, legal theory or international law)
- Comparative insights, especially with other settler colonies/common law jurisdictions/Pacific states.

Abstracts of no more than 250 words should be submitted by 30 June 2022 to Ntina Tzouvala (ntina.tzouvala@anu.edu.au). Please write ‘Teaching Material’ in the subject line.

Limited financial assistance may be available upon request, and priority will be given to casual academic workers.

For more information, click here.

Call for Papers: 2022 World Congress of Constitutional Law
International Association of Constitutional Law
CfP closes: 30 June 2022
Workshop dates: 5-9 December 2022
Workshop location: University of Johannesburg, South Africa

Come and share your ideas with constitutionalists from around the world. Choose from any of the 33 workshops curated for the Congress.

Workshop topics include:

- Transitional justice and constitutional change

- Harnessing constitutional law to address climate change: challenges and opportunities

- Comparative constitutional methods

- Constitutionalism, the COVID-19 pandemic and recovery

- Constitutional amendments and constitutional transformation: in theory and practice

- Electoral laws between democratic concerns and constitutional adjudication

- Proportionality principle in constitutional law – new challenges to a conventional judicial construction

- New frontiers of federalism

- Constitutional environmental protection for future human and non-human generations

Please submit a 500-word abstract outlining your proposed presentation by 30 June 2022.

For more information, and to submit your abstract, click here.

Call for Papers: IACL Round Table in Ankara, Turkey on ‘Environment, Climate Change and Constitutionalism’
International Association of Constitutional Law
CfP closes: 1 July 2022
Round table dates: 20-21 October 2022
Round table location: Union of Turkish Bar Associations Conference Hall, İlhami Soysal Sokak No. 3, 06230, Balgat, Ankara, Turkey

This roundtable addresses increasing national and global effects of the climate crisis and the socio-ecological problems it creates from the perspective of constitutional law. On the 50th Anniversary of the landmark United Nations Stockholm Conference that represents the first international attempt to address the challenge of preserving and enhancing the human environment, and the 52nd Anniversary of Earth Day that marks the birth of the modern environmental movement in 1970, the world's leading Constitutional Law and Environmental Law experts will come together in Ankara to discuss issues concerning rights and freedoms; equality and justice; sustainable development, constitutional democracy and adjudication resulting from the environment and climate change.

The roundtable invites scholarly proposals addressing “Climate Change and Freedoms”, “Climate Justice and Sustainable Development”, “Rule of Law, Welfare State and Environmental State”, “Constitutional Democracy and Environmental Rights”, “The Rights of the Future Generations and Global Constitutionalism”.

Interested scholars are invited to submit a CV and an abstract no longer than 500 words by July 1, 2022 to selin.esen71@gmail.com and josemar@unam.mx (please use “CfP: Environment, Climate Change and Constitutionalism” as the subject line of your e-mail).

There is no cost to participate in the conference. The conveners will provide accommodations (for up to three nights) and meals to paper presenters. Paper presenters are responsible for their own travel and incidental expenses.

For more information, click here.

Remember, if you have an AUSPUBLAW opportunity, conference or significant public lecture that you would like included in this roundup, please contact us at auspublaw@unsw.edu.au. The roundup is published once a month on the first business day of the month, so please let us know in time for that deadline.  We are grateful to Kelly Yoon for compiling this roundup.

2022 AIAL National Lecture Series: ‘Administrative Law within the Common Law Tradition’
Australian Institute of Administrative Law
Date: 1 June 2022
Time: 5:30-7:00pm (AEST)
Location: NSW (Court 1, Federal Court of Australia, Queens Square, Sydney) or Qld (Harry Gibbs Commonwealth Law Courts, 119 North Quay, Brisbane)

In 2022, the Australian Institute of Administrative Law will hold a series of National Administrative Law Lectures broadly around the theme of the future of administrative law. The first lecture in the series will be by Justice Stephen Gageler and chaired by the Hon Justice Julie Ward.

Justice Gageler was appointed to the High Court in October 2012. At the time of his appointment he was Solicitor-General of Australia. He is a graduate of the Australian National University and has post-graduate qualifications from Harvard University. As a barrister he practised extensively throughout Australia in particular in constitutional law and administrative law, and has written and spoken on key administrative law issues.

For more information, and to register, click here.

Indigenous Legal Judgments
Canberra Law School, University of Canberra; ACT Law Society; Melbourne Law School, University of Melbourne
Date: 1 June 2022
Time: 1:00-2:00pm (AEST)
Location: Online

‘Be Brave. Make Change’ — A panel of editors and authors from the trailblazing book Indigenous Legal Judgments, published by Routledge in 2021.

Join us for this online panel focusing on the Indigenous Legal Judgments book and hear from the editors of this exciting collection, Associate Professor Nicole Watson (UNSW) and Professor Heather Douglas (UniMelb), and contributing author, Mary Spiers-Williams (ANU).

The book represents a unique contribution by Indigenous and non-Indigenous scholars who have re-imagined significant legal decisions affecting Indigenous Australians and illustrated how judgments can challenge systemic racism and work to counter the dehumanisation of Indigenous peoples through legal storytelling.

The theme for Reconciliation Week in 2022 is ‘Be Brave. Make Change’ - this showcase is relevant for law and justice academics, legal practitioners, policy-makers and community partners.

For more information, and to register, click here.

School of Law Research Seminar Series: 'Teaching Against and Amidst Race'
Western Sydney University Law School
Date: 1 June 2022
Time: 1:00-2:00pm (AEST)
Location: Online

Please join us on Wednesday, 1 June 2022 from 1.00-2.00pm for a School of Law Research Seminar presented by Professor Alana Lentin, who will discuss teaching about and against race among students who are often cited by the institution for their 'diversity' but whose struggles within this racial-colonial society mainly go ignored.

For more information, and to register, click here.

Q&A with Judge Nathan Jarro
University of Queensland Law School
Date: 2 June 2022
Time: 12:00-1:00pm (AEST)
Location: Sir Llew Edwards Building (#14), Room 212, University of Queensland

Join us for a Q&A with Judge Nathan Jarro, Judge of the Queensland District Court and Queensland’s first Indigenous Judge. Judge Jarro will discuss his pathway through law, his experience practising law and the significance of law for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples.

For more information, and to register, click here.

G+T Centre Global Book Series - Against Constitutionalism
Gilbert + Tobin Centre of Public Law, UNSW Law & Justice
Date: 3 June 2022
Time: 5:00-6:00pm (AEST)
Location: Online

In this much anticipated new book (Harvard UP 2022), Professor of Public Law at the London School of Economics, Martin Loughlin, traces the development of constitutional thought, and argues that constiutionalism now propagates the widespread belief that social progress is advanced not through politics, electoral majorities, and legislative action, but through innovative judicial interpretation. In this way, the rise of constitutionalism, commonly conflated with constitutional democracy, actually contributes to its degradation. Professor Loughlin will be in conversation with Professor of Law and Head of the School of Global and Public Law at UNSW, Theunis Roux. This event will be chaired by Professor of Law and Director of the Gilbert + Tobin Centre of Public Law, Rosalind Dixon.

For more information, and to register, click here.

CCCS Global Public Law Seminar Series - The Federal Contract: A New Theoretical Framework for Federalism
Centre for Comparative Constitutional Studies, University of Melbourne
Date: 6 June 2022
Time: 5:30-7:00pm (AEST)
Location: Online

The Centre for Comparative Constitutional Studies is honoured to host a seminar to launch Professor Stephen Tierney’s new book The Federal Contract: A Constitutional Theory of Federalism, as part of the CCCS Global Public Law Seminar Series.

In rethinking the idea and practice of federalism, Stephen Tierney’s book adopts a root and branch recalibration of the federal contract. It analyses federalism through the conceptual categories which characterise the nature of modern constitutionalism: Foundations, Authority, Subjecthood, Purpose, Design and Dynamics. It seeks to explain and in so doing revitalise federalism as a discrete, capacious and adaptable concept of rule that can be deployed imaginatively to facilitate the deep territorial variety that characterises so many states in the 21st century.

For this seminar and to mark the launch of the book, Professor Tierney will be joined by five leading scholars of federalism from across the world to explore the important ideas developed in this new work. All are welcome to join this discussion, reflecting on federalism, constitutionalism and the state in the 21st century.

Chair: Professor Cheryl Saunders

Presenters:

- Professor Stephen Tierney

- Professor Eva Maria Belser

- Professor Peter Niesen

- Professor Nicholas Aroney

- Dr Asanga Welikala

For more information, and to register, click here.

You be the Judge! Do Citizen Juries Work in the Australian Context?
Electoral Regulation Research Network, University of Melbourne
Date: 8 June 2022
Time: 7:00-8:00pm (AEST)
Location: Online

Citizen juries provide an opportunity to get a representative group of citizens involved in participatory decision-making at the grassroots level. Emeritus Prof Hartz-Karp will discuss the phenomenon of citizen juries and the concept’s development in the Australian context. Emeritus Professor Geoff Gallop AC will speak to his engagement with the concept through the New Democracy Foundation and the Hon Jay Weatherill AO will reflect on his experience in overseeing a major citizen jury initiative in South Australia. This event will be chaired by Associate Professor Ron Levy.

For more information, and to register, click here.

Administration in an Emergency: Lessons from the Past Two Years
Australian National University College of Law & College of Science
Date: 15 June 2022
Time: 5:30-7:00pm (AEST)
Location: Hybrid - Online and In-person at Martin Place Chambers, Level 32, 52 Martin Place, Sydney

The AIAL (NSW) Chapter presents this hybrid in person and online event. There is a fee for this event.

Chair: Mark Seymour, Martin Place Chambers

Speakers:

- Annette, O’Callaghan NSW Parliamentary Counsel

- Samantha Lee, Redfern Legal Centre

For more information, and to register, click here.

Government Overreach – Checks and Balances on Power
Rule of Law Institute
Date: 15 June 2022
Time: 6:30-8:30pm (AEST)
Location: Police and Justice Museum, Cnr Phillip Street & Albert Street, Sydney

In the age of COVID, the propensity for government over-reach has never been greater. During the height of the pandemic states closed their borders to the rest of the nation with little regard for the plain words of the Constitution’s guarantee of freedom of movement. Government over-reach, in all its forms, is a threat to liberty. This is particularly the case with vague laws that make it difficult for people to discern the boundaries of lawful conduct. As society moves further into the age of COVID, the principles that underpin democratic governance and the rule of law need to be part of that journey. They cannot be left behind.

This Rule of Law Members Event 'Government Overreach – Checks and Balances on Power' will include wine, nibbles and mingling at 6:30pm, followed by talks from Margaret Cunneen SC, Chris Merritt and Malcolm Stewart. The event is free and open to all Members (subject to capacity limits).

For more information, and to register, click here.

Collision of Law & Climate Change
Australian National University College of Law & College of Science
Date: 15 June 2022
Time: 5:30-7:30pm (AEST)
Location: The Edinburgh Castle, 294 Pitt Street, Sydney, NSW 2000

Our expert alumni panel from the College of Law and College of Science highlights an evening of discussion and networking addressing one of the world's most important issues - climate change and the law.

Moderator: Lee Constable, TV presenter and producer

Speakers:

- Fiona Lord, sustainability consultant and current PhD Candidate with the University of Technology Sydney, Institute for Sustainable Futures

- Professor Mark Howden, Director of the ANU Institute of Climate Change

Drinks and canapes will be served after the discussion.

For more information, and to register, click here.

Pathway to Truth-telling and Treaty
Australian Academy of Law
Date: 20 June 2022
Time: 5:00-6:30pm (AEST)
Location: The Law Society of Tasmania, 28 Murray Street, Hobart, Tasmania and online (MS Teams)

The Pathway to Truth-Telling and Treaty Report to the Premier, prepared by Professor Kate Warner AC, Professor Tim McCormack and Ms Fauve Kurnadi, was tabled in the Tasmanian Parliament on 25 November 2021. According to the website of the Department of Premier and Cabinet, it “explores options for an agreed way forward towards reconciliation, as well as the view of our First Nations people on a truth‑telling process and pathway to Treaty.”

This public event will explore important aspects of the Report and the implications for the future, including the government’s commitment to implementation of the Report’s recommendations. The Premier announced in March 2022 that there was broad support to take further steps on both a Truth-telling process and Treaty process in Tasmania, and the Government will establish an Aboriginal Advisory body that can, through co-design, work with the Government to establish these two processes.

Speakers:

- Kate Warner AC FAAL, Emeritus Professor of Law, University of Tasmania, former Governor of Tasmania

- Tim McCormack FAAL, Professor of Law, Faculty of Law, University of Tasmania.

For more information, and to register, click here.

29th Annual ANZSIL Conference: International Law and Global Interconnectedness
Australian and New Zealand Society of International Law
Date: 30 June - 2 July 2022
Location: Online or In-person at JG Crawford Building, Australian National University, Canberra

The events of 2020 and 2021 continue to emphasise that human inter-connectedness is both granular and uneven. The COVID-19 pandemic has reminded us of the reality of our physical inter-connectedness as well as the importance of groups such as ‘essential workers’ for the continuing functioning of societies, domestic and international. The escalating climate crisis underscores our inter-connectedness with the environment; a connection that has profoundly shifted and is signalled with the recognition of the Age of the Anthropocene. Simultaneously, forms of inter-connectedness previously taken for granted, such as the global and regional mobility of individuals, goods and services, are facing unprecedented challenges. 

These contexts pose significant questions for international law, international lawyers and international legal institutions. At the same time, they offer unique opportunities for re-making the international legal order. At the 29th ANZSIL Conference we encourage participants to reflect on whether and how international law shapes, undermines and re-makes inter-connectedness on a global scale. 

There is a fee for this event.

For more information, and to register, click here.

ICON·S Annual Conference
ICON·S | The International Society of Public Law
Date: 4-6 July 2022  
Location: Hybrid - Online and In-person at University of Wroclaw, Poland

ICON·S | The International Society of Public Law is pleased to announce that its 2022 Annual Conference on Global Problems and Prospects in Public Law will be held in hybrid format at the University of Wrocław in Poland on 4-6 July 2022.

The machinery of public law has been called on to help manage the COVID-19 public health crisis, and in some cases it has succeeded and in others it has not operated as hoped. The same is true of the global crisis of mass migration, the risks and opportunities in law and technology, and the current state of democracy in many corners of the world. The weight of these challenges can feel daunting. History tells us, however, that crises are also opportunities for re-thinking, and for renewal. And whether our purpose is to understand or to protest, or to unmake and re-build, public law will inevitably frame our response.

We take up four key themes in our plenary and featured panels this year: democracy, migration, public health, and technology. Questions of trust and distrust feed into broader debates about democratic backsliding and the rule of law which have become a central concern in Eastern Europe and other parts of the world. In this context, technology creates both new risks and new opportunities: the revolutions in data storage and information dissemination are manifestly double-edged swords. Trust and distrust are central, too, to how societies accommodate migrants, and to how they handle issues of public health, as the current pandemic has made all too obvious. In each of these four areas, the challenges are clear and present. But they are not just dangers. Each is a demand, and an opportunity, to rethink and rebuild key aspects of our societies in light of shared democratic ideals.

For more information, and to register, click here.

Australasian Law Academics Association (ALAA) Conference 2022
Australasian Law Academics Association; Monash Law
Date: 7-9 July 2022
Location: Online or In-person in Melbourne at Monash University Law Chambers

Evolution or Revolution? Challenging Legal Education and Scholarship

The Australian university sector is undergoing a period of significant change, providing both challenges and opportunities. Remote teaching and flexible learning have become entrenched, and we have had to grapple with new ways of working and engaging. In some places, these changes have been rapid and revolutionary, while in others they have been a slower evolution of changes and trajectories that were already taking their course.

The 2022 ALAA Conference asks us to consider whether legal education and scholarship is in a state of evolution or revolution? How is legal education and scholarship being challenged by external forces, and how are we internally challenging legal education and scholarship? What are the defining features of a 2022 law school, law teacher and law student? How can we better reflect the diverse experiences of our student cohort by recognising and redressing disadvantage, especially where this has been exacerbated in recent years? How can we better support both academics and students? How have recent challenges and opportunities presented in different legal disciplines? Which changes should we hold onto, and which should we disregard? And where is further change required, in order to maximise our potential as places of excellent learning, teaching and scholarship?

For more information, and to purchase tickets, click here.

‘Not Parliamentary’? Australian Semi-parliamentarism and the Role of the Australian Senate
Australian Senate, Procedure and Research Section
Date: 8 July 2022
Time: 12:15-1:15pm (AEST)
Location: Main Committee Room, Parliament House, Canberra

Scholars and parliamentarians have struggled to accurately describe Australia's system of executive-legislative relations. Descriptive labels run the gamut from the ‘Washminster’ system to simply ‘not parliamentary’. But does it really matter what we call our parliamentary system? In short, yes. For many decades, conflict between the executive government and the legislature has often turned on the role and exercise of the Senate’s powers. Members of the House are by turns incredulous or frustrated by the Senate’s assertion of its powers, and the Senate has only grown more confident in doing so overtime.

While much reference is made to Australia’s Westminster parliamentary system, it’s clear that different actors mean different things by these terms. The concept of semi-parliamentarianism offers a parsimonious description of the way Australian politics is actually practised. It can provide parliamentary actors, scholars, journalists and the public with a way of coming to grips with the institutional logics underpinning our parliamentary intuitional design. This talk explores the implications of how our politics is actually practised and where it could continue to normatively develop.

Presenter: Dr Marija Taflaga

For more information, and to register, click here.

Australasian Society of Legal Philosophy Annual Conference
Australian Senate, Procedure and Research Section
Date: 14-15 July 2022
Location: University of Sydney

The annual conference of the Australasian Society of Legal Philosophy will be hosted by the Julius Stone Institute of Jurisprudence at the University of Sydney on 14-15 July 2022. Keynote lectures will be delivered by Professor Kirsty Gover (University of Melbourne) and Professor Claudio Michelon (University of Edinburgh). The subject of the annual book symposium will be Constituent Power and the Law by Professor Joel Colón-Ríos (Victoria University of Wellington). Commentaries will be provided by Professor Rosalind Dixon and Ayesha Wijayalath (University of New South Wales), Dr Yarran Hominh (Dartmouth College), and Associate Professor Ron Levy (Australian National University).

The aim of the ASLP Conference is to provide a forum for the discussion and debate of a range of issues in legal theory, broadly defined. It is by no means restricted to analytic legal philosophy, and the involvement of participants from other disciplines is strongly encouraged.

For more information, and to enquire, click here.

Political Parties and the Courts
Electoral Regulation Research Network
Date: 20 July 2022  
Time: 5:00-6:00pm (AEST)  
Location: Online

When should the rules, that parties make for themselves, be enforceable in the courts? High-profile litigation involving the NSW Liberal Party and the Victorian ALP in 2021-2022 has thrown this question into some confusion, with two key State Courts of Appeal setting a new and very narrow test for party rules to be adjudicated upon.

To some, this question goes to the very idea of parties as rule-governed, member-driven participatory bodies, who ultimately govern our electoral politics. To others, it implicates the freedom of association of parties as private organisations. This webinar will explore the history, law and significance of this question, and the potential consequences of recent cases such as Camenzuli v Morrison and Asmar v Albanese.

Presenters:

- Professor Anika Gauja

- Professor Graeme Orr

For more information, and to register, click here.

2022 AIAL National Administrative Law Conference: ‘Administrative Law in Unprecedented Times
Australian Institute of Administrative Law
Date: 21-22 July 2022  
Location: Hotel Realm, 18 National Circuit, Barton, ACT

The Conference invites discussion and debate on a number of themes and contemporary challenges in administrative law in these unprecedented times. It seeks to examine associated issues including response to the COVID-19 pandemic, climate change and the environment, determining and legislating the national interest, and major and ongoing challenges faced by Tribunals in addressing increased numbers and complexity of certain types of applications and associated timing pressures, particularly in the migration context. Ensuring the integrity of public institutions and public office-holders (including the proposal for a Commonwealth Integrity Commission) and recent developments in defence and national security will also be examined.

The Conference will be relevant to government decision-makers; those affected by decisions, and their advisers; members of review bodies, tribunals and courts; policy developers; public lawyers; academics; and others with an interest in Australian administrative law.

For more information, and to register, click here.

Religious Freedom, Religious Discrimination and the Role of Law
Bar Association of Queensland; University of Queensland; Supreme Court Library
Date: 13 October 2022  
Time: 5:15-6:45pm (AEST)  
Location: Banco Court, Level 3, Queen Elizabeth II Courts of Law, 415 George Street, Brisbane

Religious freedom and freedom from discrimination on the basis of religion are well-established rights in international law and many jurisdictions have a substantial case-law that examine both of these rights, including the tensions between them. While some limited forms of these rights are protected in the constitution, to date there has been relatively limited case law in Australia. With the development of statutory bills of rights and increased social tensions between secular and religious Australians, however, the law is increasingly being asked to step into conflicts that involve religion. What can we learn from the Australian case law to date and from other similar jurisdictions that can help Australian courts and legal policymakers with the complex issues that arise in this realm? 

Chair: The Hon. Justice Sarah Derrington, Federal Court of Australia, President, Australian Law Reform Commission

Presenter: Professor Carolyn Evans, Vice-Chancellor and President, Griffith University

Commentator: Professor Patrick Parkinson AM, University of Queensland

For more information, and to register, click here.

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