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Helen Anderson Publications
Published works by Centre for Employment and Labour Relations Law member Professor Helen Anderson.

Machines, Artificial Intelligence and rising global transphobia
How does facial recognition technology and surveillance capitalism put trans people in danger?Jean Linis-Dinco writes about how facial recognition technology and surveillance technology puts trans people in danger.

Special Reports
A list of all current and past special reports submitted by members of the Centre for Employment and Labour Relations Law.

Advisory Committee
Centre for Media and Communications Law is assisted by an Advisory Committee from the media and communications industry and legal practice.

Corporate Energy Transition
Funded by an Australian Research Council Discovery Project grant (DP160100255) for 2016-2019, this project explores how corporate and securities law mechanisms can be used to incentivise private sector transition to clean energy sources and business practices.

Health Law and Ethics Network
The Health Law and Ethics Network includes researchers working across health, law and bioethics, including reproductive health, mental health, regulation of health professionals, genomics and other emerging technologies.

ACTUATE: Adaptive, Multi-Factor balanced, Regulatory Compliant Routing ADM Systems

ILJH
News related to the Melbourne Law School's Reconciliation and Recognition agenda.

Work, Care and Family: Revealing and Reconstituting Legal Norms
This research aimed to reveal existing legal norms, and argued to reconstitute those norms in ways more likely to further equality and better work, care and family outcomes.

Regulating Work and Workplaces: Contracting and Bargaining in Enterprises
This project examined the way that enterprises are regulated with respect to work activity, looking at various instruments of regulation, and how these are ordered or interrelate. It also looks at the content of these instruments, and what impact this has on workplace regulation and relations.

Erika Arban
Academic profile of Dr Erika Arban, Melbourne Law School
Newsletter - May 2021

Beth Gaze
Academic profile of Professor Beth Gaze, Melbourne Law School

Research Reports & Research Papers
Access research reports and papers by members of the Centre for Corporate Law and others, that contribute to debate about corporate law issues.

Offices of the Southern Jurist-Diplomat
This project engages with the problem of how jurists, and international lawyers in particular, might conduct themselves (ourselves), ethically in our times, sometimes thought of as a moment of ‘global crisis’. To do this we take up the ‘conduct of life’ tradition emerging out of sustained engagements between Indigenous jurists, feminist historians and common law jurists in Melbourne, and puts them into relation with scholarship on connected histories and new diplomatic histories.

Reviews of Books Written or Edited by Centre Members
Reviews of books written or edited by Centre for Corporate Law members.

Kirsty Gover
Academic profile of Professor Kirsty Gover, Melbourne Law School

‘Crime and Punishment in Indonesia’ Workshop and Book Launch Video Recording
This webinar provides an assessment of the state of criminal law, law enforcement and penal policy in Indonesia. Covering a wide range of areas of criminal law, expert speakers (including Professor Topo Santoso, University of Indonesia) discusses recent efforts at reform and their prospects for success.Hosted by:LIPI, the Indonesian Institute of Sciencesthe Jentera School of LawLeIP, the Center for Court Research and AdvocacyThe Centre for Indonesian Law, Islam and Society (CILIS) of the University of MelbourneHukumonline‘Crime and Punishment in Indonesia’ Workshop and Book Launch Video Recording

Engagement
The Centre for Indonesian Law, Islam and Society runs numerous research activities throughout the year, many of them open to the public. Click through to see our list of activities.

Jamie Walvisch
Academic profile of Dr Jamie Walvisch, Melbourne Law School

The Desirability and Feasibility of Convenience Voting in Australia Project
This Electoral Regulation Research Network research project used a mixed method research design to explore how voters, legislators and electoral commissions perceive the challenges presented by the extension of convenience voting – both in terms of its growing use among electors and the liberalisation of its forms.

Meaning of Home
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.
