University of Western Sydney Law Review - AZ
- Forensic use of DNA information v. human rights and privacy challenges.
- Towards a new framework in the law of war: incorporating transnational organised crime.
- A delicate balance: regulating micro satellite technology in a big satellite world.
- Tinkering with the right to silence: the Evidence Amendment (Evidence of Silence) Act 2013 (NSW).
- Untangling adverse action - Construction, Forestry, Mining and Energy Union v. BHP Coal Pty Ltd.
- Australian statutory labour law and the near death experience of the doctrine of managerial prerogatives.
- Fees? Not so simple: Andrews and ORS v Australia New Zealand Banking Group Ltd [2012] HCA 30 (6 September 2012).
- Provocation: a totally flawed defence that has no place in Australian criminal law irrespective of sentencing regime.
- The fair work Australia decision on Qantas: entrenching the imbalance of power between employees and employers?
- Remedying the past or losing international human rights in translation? 'Comprehensive' responses to Australian national security legislation reviews.
- The application of the defence of non est factum: an exploration of its limits and boundaries.
- A legal and social analysis of 'one punch' cases in Western Australia.
- Relief from liability for company directors: recent developments and their implications.
- The conscience of the King: Kakavas v. Crown Melbourne Ltd.
- Conspiracy, a jury, the Constitution and a Swiss bank account: The Queen v. LK; The Queen v. RK (2010) HCA 17.
- The Cardinal, the writer and the philosopher: reflections on teaching at UWS.
- The 'day fine'--improving equality before the law in Australian sentencing.
- University of Western Sydney Law Alumni Occasional Address: 8 November 2013, Doltone House, Sydney.
- Should aboriginal peoples be recognised in the Australian Constitution?
- The devil in the detail: Tarkine National Coalition Inc. v. Minister for Sustainability, Environment, Water, Population and Communities.
- Liberty, terrorism and the courts.
- Anti-Terrorism Bill 2005 (Cth) and the Human Rights Act (2004) ACT.
- Developing national civil commitment laws for the mentally ill.
- Mind your language - interpreters in Australian immigration proceedings.
- Educating culturally sensible lawyers: a study of student attitudes about the role culture plays in the lawyering process.
- Censoring Internet pornography in Australia: a call for a civil rights approach to address pornographic harms.
- Abolitionist or relativist? Australia's legislative and international responses to its international human rights death penalty abolition obligations.
- The keys to opportunity--education, persistence and hard work.
- Enforcing human rights incrementally: review of Jeff King, judging social rights (Cambridge University Press, 2012).
- Judicial review for the convicted felon in Australia--a consideration of statutory context and the doctrine of attainder.
- The first generation of Muslim intellectuals and the 'rights of man'.
- US power and transnational governance.
- More than hot air: reflections on the relationship between climate change and human rights.
- Not seen and not heard: protecting elder human rights in aged care.
- Limits to state parliamentary power and the protection of judicial integrity: a principled approach?
- Back to the future: retrogression and the High Court's decision in Byrnes v. Kendle.
- Murray Gleeson: The Smiler.
- Nurturing multiple intelligences through clinical legal education.
- Editor's note.
- Board of Bendigo Regional Institute of Technical and further education V Barclay.
- Evaluating the judicial interpretation of civil commitment schemes for serious sex offenders.
- Evil regimes of law: challenges for legal theory and for international law.
- Psychological and ethical issues in the relationship between lawyers and mentally ill clients.
- The Fair Work Act 2009 (Cth): a new model?
- Copyright infringement and ISPs: Roadshow Films Pty Limited v. iiNet Limited (2011) F.C.A.F.C. 23.
- A progressive court and a balancing test: Rowe v. Electoral Commissioner (2010) H.C.A. 46.
- The common law: whither or wither?
- Crimes Against the State: From Treason to Terrorism.
- The uncomfortable demand for civic equality.
- Navigating 'muddied waters': the regulation of mass marketing and advertising by section 52 of the Trade Practices Act.
- Houldsworth: an obsolete piece in the legislative puzzle.
- The New South Wales representative proceeding: a class action half-way house.
- Rethinking consensual harm-doing.
- Emerging consumer credit issues for older Australians.
- The role of victims in NSW forensic patient proceedings.
- The high court and recognition of native title: distinguishing between the doctrines of Terra Nullius and 'desert and uncultivated'.
- Arguments for inequality: why they don't work.
- An unlawful non-citizen is being detained or (white) citizens are saving the nation from (non white) non-citizens.
- Mental illness and indefinite detention at the minister's pleasure.
- The challenge of corporate law enforcement: future directions for corporations law in Australia.
- Just wars and criminal laws.
- Rethinking limited liability.
- Detention and the anti-terrorism legislation.
- In the matter of constitutional issues concerning preventative detention in the Australian capital territory.
- Detention without trial--a threat to democratic rights.
- Autonomy and vulnerability at the death bed.
- Evaluating law reform.
- The high court and Australia's new electoral laws: Mulholland v. Australian Electoral Commission.
- The floating charge as a security device.
- Some reflections on legal professional ethics: plus ca change....
- Enforceable undertakings: a new form of settlement to resolve alleged breaches of the law.
- Misusing history: the English Revolution and modern 'tyrants' trials'.