The Kirby Seminar Series began on 23 March, 2001 with the inaugural seminar presented by Justice Michael Kirby of the High Court of Australia entitled, The Future of Human Rights.
The purpose of the series is to stimulate and share ideas for, and the substance of, legal scholarship through attracting high calibre national and international speakers, drawing upon academics from the wider university community and offering a platform for researchers (including PhD students) from within the UNE School of Law.
Given the diversity of the speakers (including their topics, backgrounds and from where they are coming), there are no set dates, times and places for the seminars – rather, these are fixed to accommodate each particular speaker and are advertised to staff and students in advance. Generally, the seminars run for one hour (including questions) during term time and are usually held in the J.N. Lewis Seminar Room within the School of Law.
| Date |
Speaker/Topic |
29 November 2007
12:00–1:00 PM (J.N. Lewis Seminar Room) |
Professor Donna Craig
Centre for Environmental Law, Macquarie University
Recognition of Customary Law in Natural Resource Management
|
5 November 2007
12:00–1:00 PM (J.N. Lewis Seminar Room) |
Phillip Falk
Griffith University
Workshop on Indigenous Inclusive Teaching and Learning Practices in Law
This seminar will address a holistic approach to developing and implementing Indigenous knowledge and perspectives within the Law School. This holistic approach encompasses the elements of Curriculum Development; Teaching and Learning, Indigenous Research; Staff Development and Training; and Student Support. These elements will be explored by drawing upon Mr Falk’s experience at Griffith University’s School of Law.
Phillip Falk is a Wiradjuri man (Central West NSW) who resides in Bundjalung country in Northern NSW. He is a Senior Lecturer at Griffith University’s School of Law and specialises in Indigenous curriculum development and its implementation..
|
18 October 2007
12:00–1:00 PM (J.N. Lewis Seminar Room) |
Partner, Allens Arthur Robinson
Climate Change Litigation — How real is the risk? |
16 October 2007
1:00–2:00 PM (J.N. Lewis Seminar Room) |
Associate Lecturer, School of Law, UNE
The Undiscovered Country: Brain death, cognitive death and wrongful life |
12 October 2007
12:00–1:00 PM (Lecture Theatre 5, W39) |
Hon. Greg James QC
President, Mental Health Review Tribunal
“Mental Health Law Reform in New South Wales” |
5 October 2007
9:00–10:00 AM (J.N. Lewis Seminar Room) |
Peter Long
Long Howland Lawyers & Advisors
Economics, Business and Law in the Blender of Farm Succession |
17 August 2007
12:00–1:00 PM (Lecture Theatre 5, W39) |
Professor Indira Carr
University of Surrey
Corruption: Legal Solutions and Limits of Law |
9 August 2007
12:00–1:00 PM (J.N. Lewis Seminar Room) |
Lecturer, UNE School of Law
Pericles was a Plumber: Towards Resolving the ‘Vocational’ and ‘Liberal’ Dichotomy in Legal Education |
30 July 2007
12:00–1:00 PM (J.N. Lewis Seminar Room) |
Dr Rob McLaughlin
Royal Australian Navy
Legal Adviser, Military Strategic Commitments, Australian Defence Headquarters, Canberra
Current and Evolving Challenges in the Law of Armed Conflict
Dr McLaughlin will discuss changing paradigms in the law of armed conflict, including civilianisation of military issues and militarisation of civilian issues. |
31 May 2007
1:00–2:00 PM (J.N. Lewis Seminar Room) |
Dr Ann Brower
Lincoln University, Christchurch NZ
Closing the Deal at any Cost: Principals, Agents, and Sub-Agents in New Zealand Land Reform
Ellickson (1991) argues that welfare-enhancing norms, not the law, often prevail when adjudicating disputes over property. In 1990, about 20% of the South Island of New Zealand consisted of Crown land under long-term lease to pastoral farmers. 77 leaseholds have since been partially privatised through “tenure review,” a bilateral exchange of property rights whereby lessees acquire freehold title to part of their former leaseholds and the Crown resumes land for conservation. Using data on the 77 deals completed to date, we test and reject the hypothesis that the value of property rights exchanged drives prices, no matter who claims to own which rights. Instead, prices lie on or below the lessees’ demand curve for freehold land, and reveal that who acquires how much land is irrelevant to price. This is consistent with both Ellicksonian and agency theories. Heretofore classified prices appear to give rise to a principal-agent problem with a new twist — the contractor subagent. The ministerial principal directs the agent to close deals at minimal cost to the Crown; but the agent rewards the subagent for closing deals, regardless of cost. Hence subagents do not resist lessees’ rent-seeking, and the lessees’ demand curve serves as the lower bound for generosity in price. This outcome is welfare-enhancing to all present at the negotiating table — the lessee, the agent, and the subagent — at the expense of the public.
Ann L. Brower, Adrian Monks and Philip Meguire |
30 May 2007
12:00–1:00 PM (J.N. Lewis Seminar Room) |
Justin Rose
Ag Law Centre, UNE
Legal Pluralism and Environmental Governance in Papua New Guinea, Vanuatu and the Federated States of Micronesia
Justin Rose is among an international team of scholars currently investigating the ongoing and adapting roles of customary laws and indigenous institutions in environmental governance in Melanesia and Micronesia, as well as interactivity between these and state-based laws, institutions and interventions. Justin’s seminar overviews this research, discusses its relevance to broader discourses in policy and law and for ecologically sustainable development, and summarises the preliminary findings. |
30 April 2007
12:00–1:00 PM (J.N. Lewis Seminar Room) |
Dr Dayle Smith
Brisbane Bar (Retired)
Quo Warranto? (By What Authority?)
The Tokyo War Crimes Tribunal
A special screening of rarely seen footage of the tokyo war crimes tribunal with commentary by Dr Smith, including observations on the parallels with the US Military Commission trials of David Hicks and others. |
12 March 2007
12:00–1:00 PM (J.N. Lewis Seminar Room) |
Professor Michael Hahn
University of Waikato, Hamilton, NZ
The World Trading System – From Single Undertaking to a Two-Track Approach
The Treaty establishing the World Trade Organization and the attached Agreements dealing with trade in goods, trade in services, trade-related intellectual property rights and, not the least, dispute settlement is viewed by many scholarly writers as a treaty of constitutional quality. Its dispute settlement mechanism is more advanced than any other international dispute settlement mechanism. Even more important than such a theoretical classification is the acceptance by Member States. The WTO Dispute Settlement is massively used by Members, making sure that by and large violations of WTO law will be established by and in an impartial forum on a regular basis. While this has not prevented Member states from breaking WTO law, it is probably fair to say that adherence to WTO obligations is high. The success of the WTO – Vietnam joined as the 150th Member recently – could be the cause for some of its difficulties. Since the establishment of the WTO more than 250 bilateral trade agreements have been concluded. As of today almost half of the world’s trade is (also) governed by those FTAs.
Professor Hahn’s Kirby Seminar will highlight the problems caused by this multitude of partially overlapping trade regimes and propose potential remedies. He is an expert on international economic law, in particular WTO and EC foreign trade law. After a receiving a law degree from Frankfurt University, Professor Hahn joined the prestigious Max-Planck-Institute for Comparative Public Law and Public International Law in Heidelberg, Germany as a research fellow. He earned his doctorate with a study on “Unilateral Suspensions of GATT Obligations as Reprisal”. Professor Hahn held positions at several German and US Law Schools. In October 2005 he was appointed Professor at the University of Waikato Law School. He also teaches as a visiting Professor at Saarland University. Professor Hahn’s latest publications deal with cultural diversity, EC foreign trade law and legal problems of the regulation of biotechnology. He has just been invited to co-author the 3rd edition of the standard WTO treatise Matsushita/Schoenbaum/Mavroidis, The WTO – Law, Practice and Policy (OUP, 2nd ed. published in 2006). Professor Hahn is also a Member of the International Law Association’s International Trade Law Committee. |
28 February 2007
12:00–1:00 PM (J.N. Lewis Seminar Room) |
Professor Brad Sherman
Director Australian Centre for Intellectual Property in Agriculture, University of Queensland
The Original Clones – On the Emergence of Intellectual Property Rights in Living Organisms
|
| Date |
Speaker/Topic |
15 December 2006
1:00–2:00 PM (J.N. Lewis Seminar Room, Faculty of Economics, Business and Law) |
Lecturer, UNE School of Law.
The Libel Trials of Andrew Bent, 1825–1838
This paper is introduced with an overview of the larger PhD project, ‘Defamation in the Australian Colonies, 1824–1874’, including an approach to methodology and explanation as to how this sub-topic fits into that larger picture as something of a case study. Andrew Bent, as an ex-convict, is not widely recognised for initiating the free press in the Australian colonies. In the period 1825–1838, Bent was a defendant in some nine libel actions in the Supreme Court of Van Diemen’s Land. Two of these cases are examined as having particular significance, with a specific focus upon the role of defamation law in transforming the nature and boundaries of public speech in Van Diemen's Land over the relevant period. |
25 October 2006
1:00–2:00 PM (Lecture Theatre 5, Faculty of Economics, Business and Law) |
School of Law and Justice, Southern Cross University.
University Governance: Councils, Vice Chancellor’s Executives, Academic Boards and the Law
Professor Jackson was the foundation Dean of the School of Law and Justice, Southern Cross University, and headed the School until February 1998. His specialities are in commercial, company and higher education law. He is the author of a number of books and articles, including Australian Corporate Law with Tomasic and Woellner. Professor Jackson’s doctorate was entitled “Academic Freedom in Australian Universities”. Currently he is publishing in the areas of academic freedom, legal obligations of members of university councils, and the application of the Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth) to universities. |
5 October 2006
2:30–3:30 PM (Moot Court, Economics, Business and Law) |
Cormack Dunn
Corrs Chambers Westgarth Lawyers.
Go Directly to Gaol – New Frontiers in OHS Law
Mr Dunn is acting for the first CEO of a publicly listed company charged with an OHS offence. These are criminal offences which carry a possible sentence of imprisonment for up to 5 years. This prosecution is the first of a number now on foot and reflects a significant change in policy by the NSW government towards director and manager obligations under OHS legislation. Mr Dunn will present on the ramifications this prosecution policy has upon persons charged and its appropriateness in light of limits under the legislation. Mr Dunn has acted for a number of large international and Australian corporations in relation to OHS prosecutions. Prior to joining Corrs Chambers Westgarth Lawyers in 2004, Mr Dunn worked for the NSW Police, WorkCover NSW and the NSW Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions. |
7 September 2006
1:00–2:00 PM (Lecture Theatre 4, Economics, Business and Law) |
Professor in RegNet and Director of the Centre for International Governance and Justice. Professor of International Law and Human Rights in the College of Law, ANU.
The Problems of Building Justice and Democracy after Conflict
Professor Charlesworth’s interests are in international law and human rights law. She has held visiting appointments at Washington & Lee School of Law, Harvard Law School, NYU Global Law School and in 2005 was the 24th Wayne Morse Professor at the University of Oregon. Current research projects include the legitimacy of UN Security Council decisions, the impact of international law on Australian law and the role of women in international dispute resolution. She has worked with various non-governmental human rights organisations on ways to implement international human rights standards and was chair of the ACT Government’s inquiry into an ACT Bill of Rights, which culminated in the adoption of the ACT Human Rights Act 2004. She is Patron of the ACT Women’s Legal Service. In 2005, she was awarded a Federation Fellowship by the Australian Research Council. |
2 June 2006
9:15–10:30 AM (Lecture Room A2, Arts Building) |
Lecturer, School of Law, University of Reading
Reformulating the Body Spiritual: The Identification and Representation of the Church of England in the Later Nineteenth Century |
23 May 2006
1:00–2:00 PM (J.N. Lewis Seminar Room) |
Russell Hogg has published widely in the areas of criminology and criminal justice studies, including Policing the Rural Crisis (Federation Press, 2006, co-authored with Kerry Carrington) and Critical Criminology: Issues, Debates, Challenges (Willan, 2002, co-edited with Kerry Carrington). He is also co-editor of a forthcoming collection of essays on crime in rural Australia.
Executive Proscription of Terrorist Organisations
|
1 May 2006
1:00–2:00 PM (J.N. Lewis Seminar Room) |
Pro-Dean (Teaching Programs) and Director of the Centre for Health Governance, Law and Ethics at the Faculty of Law, University of Sydney
The Next Pandemic?: Globalisation and Public Health Laws
|
10 March 2006
2:00–3:00 PM (J.N. Lewis Seminar Room) |
Senior Lecturer, Sydney Law School, University of Sydney
A critical overview of Work Choices and its impact on the regulation of the Australian labour market
Dr Joellen Riley has been teaching and researching in the fields of labour law and commercial law since joining the Law Faculty of the University of Sydney in 1998. She is also a consultant with Harmers Workplace Lawyers, and academic adviser to the Law Society of NSW’s Specialist Accreditation Committee on Employment and Industrial Law. Her publications include Workplace Relations: A Guide to the 1996 Changes (LBC, 1997), Employee Protection at Common Law (Federation 2005), and she has two books due for publication in 2006 – The Law of Work with Rosemary Owens (OUP) and Work Choices: A Guide to the 2005 Changes with Kate Peterson (LBC).
|
10 March 2006
11:00–12:00 noon (J.N. Lewis Seminar Room) |
PhD Candidate, School of Law, UNE
’Supple, Sassier and Commercially-Minded‘? Assessing the current higher education employment relations agenda and the drive to individualise the Australian academic employment relationship
|
| Date |
Speaker/Topic |
15 November 2005
1:00–2:00 PM (J.N. Lewis Seminar Room) |
Reader in Law, London School of Economics
What is wrong with character evidence?
Abstract: The common law has traditionally excluded bad character evidence against defendants (bad character evidence usually means that the accused has a previous conviction). Thus, if D is on trial for burglary, evidence that he has previously committed burglary cannot be admitted; there are various exceptions to the rule, eg where the previous conviction provides particularly compelling evidence of guilt. The usual reason given for the exclusionary rule is that bad character evidence is prejudicial, but that is not very convincing. Taking this as given, the question arises: what other reasons might there be for generally excluding bad character evidence? In this paper, I explore other possible exceptions, drawing on literature in criminology and sentencing theory to probe the possibility that the exclusionary rule might be justified by a concern for the autonomy of defendants.
|
8 November 2005
12:30 PM (LSR) |
Associate Lecturer, School of Law, UNE
Trafficking in humans for sexual exploitation: An assessment of Australia’s law and policy response. |
26 October 2005
1:00 PM (LSR) |
Dr David Hamer
Senior Lecturer, School of Law, UNE
Reconciling reverse burdens of proof with the presumption of innocence under the Human Rights Act 1998 (UK) |
4 October 2005
12:30 PM (LSR) |
Tutorial Fellow in Law at Corpus Christi College, Oxford University
‘A Duty to Be Cautious’: The Precautionary Principle and Australian Courts and Tribunals |
30 September 2005
1:00 PM (Paul Barrett Lecture Theatre, Psychology Building) |
Professor Pat Carlen
[Co-hosted with Sociology, School of Social Sciences]
Visiting Professor of Criminology, Kent University, United Kingdom
Imprisonment and the Penal Body Politic |
27 September 2005
1:00 PM (Dean’s Conference Room) |
Carolyn Middleton
LLM research student, School of Law, UNE
Is the judicial discretion to admit illegally or improperly obtained evidence, predictable or effective? |
6 September 2005
1:00 PM (LSR) |
Sir Gerard Brennan Professor of Law; Head, TC Beirne School of Law, The University of Queensland
The Province of the Law of Tracing |
| 18 August 2005 |
Professor, Dean of Law, University of Wollongong
Australia’s Maritime Boundary with East Timor: The Rise and Fall of the Timor Gap
|
| 23 June 2005 |
Robert A Leflar Distinguished Professor of Law, University of Arkansas, United States
Sovereignty & Property: American Indian law, Australian Aboriginal law and the concepts of ownership and governance
|
| 26 May 2005 |
Michael Eburn
Senior Lecturer, School of Law, University of New England
The Felons Apprehension Acts 1865–1899 (NSW)
|
| 5 May 2005 |
Professor, Head of Law, Law and Philosophy Program, Research School of Social Sciences, Australian National University
The New Face of Advocates’ Immunity
|
| 9 March 2005 |
Associate Professor, School of Law, The University of New England
The Modern Approach to Statutory Interpretation
|
| 16 February 2005 |
Professor of Agricultural Economics and Law
The Pennsylvania State University, USA
Community Conflicts Over Large Scale Production Facilities: A Research Report
|
| Date |
Speaker/Topic |
| 15 October 2004 |
Barbara Holborow
Former Magistrate of the NSW Children’s Court
Is There Really a Juvenile Justice? |
| 21 September 2004 |
Christopher Enright
PhD Student in Law, School of Law, University of New England.
Author of: Legal Techinque (2002), Federation Press
Models for Working with Law – Teaching and Researching |
| 1 September 2004 |
Associate Professor, School of Law, University of New England
Historical Context in the Common Law of Tort: How to Get It and What to Make Of It |
| 27 August 2004 |
Mark Spackman
Professor, School of Biological, Biomedical & Molecular Sciences, Faculty of Science, University of New England
ARC Research Grants: Tips and Hints |
| 30 July 2004 |
Frank Brennan
Lawyer, Jesuit Priest, Social Justice Campaigner
Author of: Tampering with Asylum; Legislating Liberty; Too Much Order With Too Little Law etc.
Can Lawyers Help Resolve the Timor Gap Crisis? |
| 16 June 2004 |
Jim Thomson
LLM, PhD Harvard
A Tub to a Whale: The Non Utility of a Bill of Rights in Australia |
| 11 June 2004 |
Martin Chanock
Professor, School of Law and Legal Studies, La Trobe University
Globalisation and Legal Transplants: Understanding Law in Context |
| 4 May 2004 |
Stephen Guest
Professor of Legal Philosophy, Faculty of Laws, University College London.
Author of: Ronald Dworkin (2nd ed, 1997) and Positivism Today (1996).
A Comparison of Integrity with Justice as a Model for Law. |
| 8 April 2004 |
Amanda Williamson
PhD Student, School of Law, University of New England
Contemporary Employment Relations in Australia: Assessing the Impact of Individualism and Collectivism upon the Academic Employment Relationship |
| 2 April 2004 |
Senior Lecturer, School of Law, University of New England
Trial of Hicks and Habib by Foreign Military Court: Constitutional Issues and Executive Decision Making |
| Date |
Speaker/Topic |
| 9 October 2003 |
John Coombs QC
Former President, Australian Bar Association and New South Wales Bar Association
How Can You Appear For Someone You Know Is Guilty? |
| 19 September 2003 |
Professor, School of Law, University of New England
Is The Law Lecture Dead? |
| 12 September 2003 |
Associate Professor, School of Law, University of New England
Human Rights and Private Law – An Unhappy Combination? |
| 15 August 2003 |
Michael Macklin
Professor and Dean of the Faculty of Arts, University of New England. Former Senator for Queensland in the Federal Parliament
Making law – the perspective of a philosopher parliamentarian |
| 8 August 2003 |
Sandra Welsman
Director, Australian Centre of Agriculture and Law, University of New England
Interfaces of Agricultural Business, Science and Law |
| 31 July 2003 |
Lecturer, School of Law, University of New England
The Buck Stops Here! Responsibilities of States for Wrongs Committed by Private Individuals |
| 14 July 2003 |
Paul Latimer
Associate Professor, Department of Business Law and Taxation, Monash University
Current Issues in Corporate Governance |
| 15 May 2003 |
Justice Tony North
Federal Court of Australia
On-country native title hearings |
| 8 May 2003 |
Ivan Shearer
Challis Professor of International Law, University of Sydney
Member of the Order of Australia (AM), 1995
War, armed conflict and the circumstances in which any state may use force against another state without the authority of the United Nations Security Council |
| 27 March 2003 |
Lecturer, School of Law, University of New England
Constitutionalism and the Revival of the Republican Political Tradition: an Alternative Approach to Protecting Human Rights |
| 20 March 2003 |
David Hamer
Lecturer, School of Law, University of New England
Justice, Probability & Juridical Proof |