
Centre for Employment and Labour Relations Law
The Centre for Employment and Labour Relations aims to contribute to the development of labour and employment law throughout Australia and the world.

Submissions
A list of all current and past submissions from the Centre for Employment and Labour Relations Law.

Staff
View the Tax Group faculty members.

People
Find out about the Competition Law and Economics Network's Director and members

Brad Jessup
Academic profile of Dr Brad Jessup, Melbourne Law School

How are low protection workers regulated? A pilot study in Australia and Indonesia
This project was a preliminary investigation of the norms and rules that govern workers who lie outside the scope of labour standards laws (in either a legal or practical sense).

Resources
The Centre for Corporate Law provides useful resources on corporate law literature, links to commercial law journals, legislation, courts and other relevant institutions. The Centre also hosts an open-access archive of the Corporate Law Bulletin.

News and Events
View news items, current and past events hosted by the Intellectual Property Research Institute of Australia.

News
Read recent and past news relating to the Law School's Reconciliation and Recognition agenda

'Legal Cooperation, Harmonization and Unification: An ASEAN Perspective' Online Conference
Online conference on legal cooperation, harmonization and unification in the ASEAN region, co-hosted by the Faculty of Law, Surabaya University; School of Law, Vietnam National University Hanoi; International Organization of Educators and Researchers Inc. (IOER); and the Asian Law Centre.

Associates and Teaching Associates
Current Associates and Teaching Associates working at the Centre for Employment and Labour Relations Law.

Negotiated Enforcement
'Restoring public trust in charities – reforming governance and enforcement' is a project from the Centre for Corporate Law which aims to undertake comparative analysis and empirical research and to develop proposals for effective law and policy reform. It is expected to strengthen and maximize the charity sector’s capacity to contribute to social and economic life in Australia.

Amanda Whiting
Academic profile of Associate Professor Amanda Whiting, Melbourne Law School

2021 Past Events

The Non-Fatal Strangulation Offence as a Response to Domestic and Family Violence
Melbourne Law School, along with Flinders University and Australian National University have been funded by the Australian Research Council to undertake a qualitative research project examining the meaning of home for children and young people after parental separation. Parental separation is likely to result in big changes in home arrangements for children and young people, yet so far, how children and young people think about ‘home’ after parental separation remains unexplored in research.

A Brief Introduction to the Korean Judicial System and Court Hierarchy
No 13 (2021) by Subin Cho

Associates
CILIS Associates are academic members from external institutions with significant reputations in the area of Indonesian and islamic studies.

2020 Past Events

About
The Obligations Group supports research on the law of contract, torts, unjust enrichment, equity and trusts, remedies and private law theory.

Counter Narratives
This project, hosted by the McKenzie Postdoctoral Fellowship and Institute for International Law and the Humanities, is focused on encounters between juridical, political and cultural narratives in the context of climate change.

Submissions and Reports
A large part of the Centre for Comparative Constitutional Studies' engagement is with government itself. See a list of current and past submissions and reports to government inquests, inquiries and commissions here.

Judy Bourke
Academic profile of Lecturer Judy Bourke, Melbourne Law School

Eddie Cubillo
Academic profile of Mr Eddie Cubillo, Melbourne Law School

Work Choices Analysis
The Centre for Employment and Labour Relations Law engaged in comprehensive and long-term analysis of the Work Choices legislation enacted by federal parliament in late 2005, and submitted a detailed critique of the proposed amendments to the Senate Inquiry on the Work Choices Bill.
