About us
Background
Melbourne Law School (MLS) has had strength in disability law for many years. The Disability Hallmark Research Initiative was one of the first Hallmark Initiatives at the University of Melbourne (UoM) and it was hosted at MLS from 2014–2018 and led by Associate Professor Arstein-Kerslake as Academic Convenor and Professor Keith McVilly as Chair of the Steering Committee. The Initiative focused on interdisciplinary work across the University, with a focus on disability rights.
Purpose and Scope
Laws have a profound impact on all citizens, but today the law does not treat all Australians equally. Therefore, the primary purpose of the Disability Inclusive Law and Policy Hub is to contribute to ensuring that all of Australia’s laws treat people with disability equally.
Therefore the Hub encompasses the entire spectrum of ways in which disability, law, and policy intersect – for example, discrimination, human rights, legal capacity, mental health, employment, social security, the NDIS, criminal law, technology, artificial intelligence (AI), access to health care and others. It is unique in Australia and one of only a small number of disability law research hubs globally with such a broad purpose and vision.
The Hub provides an academic research platform for scholars throughout the Melbourne Law School to share ideas and collaborate in relation to law and policy reform to contribute to improving outcomes for people with disability.
The Hub is deeply committed to working with people with disability, their families and carers to focus on the issues that are of most importance them. It is therefore a platform for partnership, collaboration and deep listening.
The Hub is one of seven disability research hubs supported by the Melbourne Disability Institute and so is part of a broader network of researchers committed to improving the lives of people with disability, their families and carers.
The Hub builds on strong relationships with the disability community, previous interdisciplinary collaborations, including the Disability Hallmark Research Initiative, and the Melbourne Law School Disability Network.
The Hub is also committed engaging directly with curriculum review processes and undertaking ongoing efforts to ensure that disability inclusive law and policy is embedded in teaching and learning at the University of Melbourne and ensuring that the University of Melbourne is a leader in disability inclusion.