The University of New South Wales

go to UNSW home page

General Handbook


PRINT THIS PAGE
Faculty Centres and Units
students

Australasian Legal Information Institute (AustLII)

The Australasian Legal Information Institute (www.austlii.edu.au) provides free internet access to Australian legal materials and to global legal materials through its WorldLII and CommonLII services.

AustLII is one of the largest sources of legal materials on the Internet.

The AustLII collection contains over 200 full-text databases including the legislation of all Australian jurisdictions, decisions of all superior Courts and over 100 Courts and Tribunals in total, the complete Australian Treaties Library, the reports of almost all Law Reform Commissions, and over 30 law journals.

AustLII has provided its software and expertise to assist in the creation of other free access legal information institutes in the South Pacific (www.paclii.org), United Kingdom and Ireland (www.bailii.org), Hong Kong (www.hklii.org) , South Africa (www.saflii.org), New Zealand (www.nzlii.org) and elsewhere. In cooperation with all these organisations, AustLII has created and runs WorldII, the World Legal Information Institute (www.worldlii.org), and CommonLII (www.commonlii.org) covering all Commonwealth countries. WorldII provides access to over 650 free access databases from contributing LIIs, and has developed its own collection of decisions of international courts and tribunals.

AustLII is by far the most-used Australian legal resource on the Internet, receiving up to 800,000 'hits' per working day. AustLII's users span the whole community, including educational institutions, the legal profession, business and government.

AustLII is operated jointly by the Faculties of Law at UNSW and at the University of Technology, Sydney (UTS). It is funded by grants of over $1.5 million per year from sources such as its host universities, the Australian Research Council, Asian Development Bank, AusAID, government agencies, Courts and Tribunals, law firms and legal publishers.

For more information about AustLII, please contact feedback@austlii.edu.au

Australian Human Rights Centre

Established in 1986, the Australian Human Rights Centre is an inter-disciplinary research and teaching institute based in the Faculty of Law at the University of NSW.

The AHRC brings together student interns and volunteers, Australian and international research scholars, and academics and practitioners with a view to increase public awareness of human rights issues, laws, standards and processes within Australia and the international community. The Centre facilitates and undertakes research projects and educational programs on contemporary human rights issues, with a particular focus on economic, social and cultural rights. Its current areas of work include health and human rights; trade and corporate accountability; environmental justice and international humanitarian law.

The AHRC coordinates and develops interdisciplinary courses on aspects of human rights, including the establishment of cross-faculty teaching linkages. It also provides a forum for debate and scholarship by hosting seminars, conferences and the Annual AHRC Public Lecture. The AHRC disseminates accessible information on developments in the human rights field through a variety of online resources, and the publication of the Australian Journal of Human Rights and the Human Rights Defender.

For further information, contact the AHRC by telephone: (02) 9385-1803, email ahrc@unsw.edu.au, or visit the website: www.ahrcentre.org

Continuing Legal Education Centre

The Continuing Legal Education Centre (CLE) provides high quality professional education for lawyers and other professionals. CLE provides an important link between the Faculty of Law, the legal profession in Australia and the wider national and international community.

The objectives of the CLE program are:
  • to provide programs which meet the legally-related educational needs of professional groups, especially but not limited to, lawyers;
  • to develop the image of the Faculty as being in the forefront of legal development in key areas and active in legal criticism by running high quality educational programs in these areas; and
  • to derive income from the conduct of programs for the Faculty's purposes.
The range of programs offered includes:
  • day-time or evening seminars designed to update the knowledge of legal practitioners and other professionals;
  • conferences which provide a forum for discussion of and training in new or developing areas of law and legal practice;
  • legal skills and accreditation programs for lawyers and non-lawyers in areas of practice and procedure such as immigration law and legal research;
  • short programs that can be accredited to one of three postgraduate legal degrees;
  • short programs in substantive law for particular professional groups, including professionals from foreign jurisdictions.
For further information on particular CLE activities please contact the Director, Christopher Lemercier, telephone (02) 9385 3227, fax 9385 3227, website www.cle.unsw.edu.au

Cyberspace Law and Policy Centre

scientia building
The Cyberspace Law and Policy Centre facilitates research, education and public interest advocacy on legal and policy issues concerning transactions in cyberspace and the worlds of IT and digital communications. The distinctive aim of the Centre is to assess these frequently technical issues from a public interest perspective. The centre made the transition in 2004 towards a research projects basis after generous initial startup sponsorship from major international law firm Baker & McKenzie from 2001.

Core centre activities include the support of research and publications by our research associates and postgraduate research associates, the organisation of conferences and symposia for the public and various professions or sectors, and promotion of awareness of public interest aspects of online, IT and IP issues. Topics covered include e-commerce and digital financial services, online content regulation, e-crime and e-security, international aspects of Internet regulation’, e-authentication, Spam regulation, impact of the US FTA on intellectual property laws, and effectiveness of privacy laws. These dealt with a range of emerging issues such as challenges to earlier copyright models brought on by advances in IT and networking, mechanisms for ensuring trust in online transactions, the extension of privacy rules to the private sector and the internet, new legislative initiatives on cyber-crime and Internet censorship, and the resolution of jurisdictional issues in relation to disputes arising out of cross-national online transactions. The symposia provide a forum for free–ranging discussion between experts about the issues involved; by avoiding the conference format and allow experts a unique opportunity to exchange views.

The Centre also works with AustLII to develop new research resources, online publications and experimental meta-search tools, and invites interns and other visitors to take part in our activities.

The Centre is auspicing a number of major ARC research projects, hosting visiting scholars and research databases in other areas, and developing proposals for further research. The projects include: 'Unlocking IP' exploring new models for sharing and trading intellectual property (Prof Graham Greenleaf and 10 other investigators and five industry partners), Interpreting Privacy Principles comparing how privacy principles in different jurisdictions are interpreted and applied (Prof Greenleaf and two international collaborators), and Regulating Online Investing doing fundamental user-centred research on the effectiveness of current contractual and regulatory arrangements for users of online investment services (Prof Dimity Kingsford Smith, with Prof Bottomley in ANU and Prof Williamson at Monash). A recent highlight was the international conference held in July 2006, "Unlocking IP 2006: The tasks ahead", which built on the original conference in 2004.

For more information, see the Centre's website at: www.CyberLawCentre.org, or project sites cyberlawcentre.org/unlocking-ip, cyberlawcentre.org/ipp, and cyberlawcentre.org/onlineinvesting.

Diplomacy Training Program

The Diplomacy Training Program (DTP) is a non-government organisation, having an affiliation with the University through the Faculty of Law. It is physically located within the Faculty and enjoys the close involvement of academic staff in a voluntary capacity, both as trainers and Board Members. The DTP was founded in 1989 by Professor Jose Ramos Horta, 1996 Nobel Peace Laureate, representative in exile of East Timor at the UN for more than twelve years, and now Prime Minister of Timor-Leste.

The Program provides training in human rights and "people's diplomacy" to non-governmental organisations and other sectors of civil society throughout the Asia-Pacific and indigenous Australia.

In its seventeen years of existence, the DTP has developed specialised teaching materials and participatory skill-building methods based upon NGO needs and priorities. It provides an introduction to international human rights standards and procedures, including relevant UN conventions and institutions, and practical skills for human rights education and advocacy. Sessions include lobbying and negotiation, working with the media, using the internet, NGO strategies and institutional standards. New thematic programs have been developed on Indigenous Peoples Rights, Migrant Workers' Rights, Human Rights and Trade and Human Rights and Business.

Since January 1990, the DTP has conducted fifteen annual regional training sessions of 3-4 weeks in Bangkok, Colombo, Dili, Manila, Sydney and Darwin, as well as regional and in-country sessions of 1-2 weeks duration in Australia, Bangladesh, Cambodia, Fiji, India, Indonesia, Malaysia, Melanesia, Nepal, New Zealand, the Philippines, Sri Lanka, Taiwan, and Thailand.

To date, the DTP has trained over 1000 human rights defenders from 30 countries.

Its board members are Professor Paul Redmond (Chair), Ms Olga Havnen (Senior Policy Advisor, NT Government), Emeritus Professor Garth Nettheim (UNSW), Dr Sarah Pritchard (Barrister at Law), Ms Louise Sylvan (Australian Competition and Consumer Commission), Dr. John Pace (Former Secretary, UN Commission on Human Rights), Associate Professor Andrea Durbach (Director, Australian Human Rights Centre), Mr. Philip Chung (Executive Director, AUSTLII), Mr. Roewen Wishart (Australian Bush Heritage Fund), and Professor Andrew Byrnes (UNSW). Professor Jose Ramos-Horta continues his involvement as official Patron of the DTP.

The DTP is independently funded from outside sources. Funders include: Oxfam; The Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs; NZ AID; Caritas and the Myer Foundation.

The DTP has close working relations with other NGOs, including Asian Human Rights Commission, (Hong Kong), Asian Forum for Human Rights and Development (Forum Asia), Asian Regional Resource Centre for Human Rights Education (Bangkok), Pacific Concerns Resource Centre (Fiji), Pacific Island Association of NGOs (Vanuatu); South Asia Human Rights Documentation Centre (India), Peace and Democracy Foundation, (Timor Leste), and the International Service for Human Rights (Geneva).

European Law Centre

The European Law Centre was established in 1996. The Centre's objectives are to advance research into, and the graduate study of, European Law and European legal and political institutions particularly with a view to fostering interdisciplinary studies in:
  • European community law;
  • European comparative law;
  • European and comparative human rights;
  • European integration;
  • the framework of economic, trade and political cooperation between Europe and the Australasian region;
  • workable models for regional economic and political cooperation which may be of use in Australia's own region.
students
The Centre also fosters research into law in Europe and transformation of law in post-communist Europe. Recently two volumes edited by the co-directors were published.
The Centre has organised workshops and conferences in Australia and Europe. It is in close collaboration with the Law Department of the European University Institute in Florence and other European universities. The Centre collaborates with the Contemporary Europe Research Centre at the University of Melbourne.

The ELC also promotes a series of evening colloquia and public lectures by visitors to the Centre.

The ELC is connected with the LLM specialization in EU law.

For further information contact the Directors: A/Professor Adam Czarnota, telephone (02) 9385 2255, and Professor Martin Krygier, telephone (02) 9385 2240.

Gilbert + Tobin Centre of Public Law

The Gilbert + Tobin Centre of Public Law provides a focal point for research into and discussion of important questions of public law for the academic, professional and wider community. The Centre promotes independent ideas and ground breaking research. The Centre is supported by the considerable weight of research and teaching expertise in the area of public law contributed by other members of academic staff of the Faculty.

The Centre has a high profile and an influential role in public debate in the broad domain of public law, a site of change of considerable legal, political and social significance. The work of the Centre is concentrated on specific long and short-term projects. Its projects cover topics such as terrorism and the law, Charters of Rights, electoral law, trade law, public law litigation, an Australian Republic, a treaty between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians and the impact of international law on Australian domestic law.

For more information, see the Centre's website at www.gtcentre.unsw.edu.au

Indigenous Law Centre

The Indigenous Law Centre was established (originally as the Aboriginal Law Research Unit, then the Aboriginal Law Centre) within the University in 1981. Since its inception, the Centre has made a continuing contribution to the development of scholarship, the reform of laws and policy, the education of law students and others.

The Centre has focused largely on the Indigenous peoples of Australia but also has interest and expertise in matters of comparative law and policy.

The Centre coordinates and conducts research; facilitates the dissemination of information in the multi-disciplinary area of the indigenous peoples and the law; arranges conferences and similar events.

The Centre has published the Indigenous Law Bulletin (previously the Aboriginal Law Bulletin) continuously since 1981 and currently produces eight issues per year. The Australian Indigenous Law Reporter, a quarterly journal, is also published by the Centre. The ILC works closely with AustLII to develop and publish on-line resources in its areas of expertise.

Staff and associates of the Centre teach both undergraduate and graduate electives in the Faculty of Law. Staff and associates are regularly called up on to give occasional presentations in other faculties and outside the University. The Centre welcomes visiting scholars, interns and volunteers.

For more information, call the Centre on (02) 9385 2252 or email us at ilc@unsw.edu.au

Kingsford Legal Centre

Kingsford Legal Centre is a community legal centre and the Faculty of Law's legal clinic. The Centre provides a clinical teaching program for law students where students are able to analyse the operation of the legal system and lawyer client relationships while working on cases for real clients.

The Centre is one of over 35 community legal centres in NSW, and students work under the supervision of Centre lawyers in acting for members of the local community who cannot afford private legal assistance.

The Centre provides legal advice in a wide variety of matters and takes on cases in areas such as discrimination, employment, domestic violence, tenancy, credit and debt, consumer complaints, criminal law and victims compensation. The Centre assists over 3,000 people a year.

The Centre began operation in 1981. It employs five lawyers, one of whom (the Director) is a Senior Lecturer in the Faculty of Law. The Centre is jointly funded by the Faculty of Law and the Community Legal Services Legal Funding Program through the State and Federal Governments. In addition, the law firm Freehills maintains the permanent secondment of a solicitor's position to the Centre. Beginning in Semester 2 2006, Allens Arthur Robinson provide a seconded solicitor for 6 months of each year also.

The courses LAWS2303 Clinical Legal Experience (Intensive), LAWS2304 Clinical Legal Experience, and LAWS2305 Clinical Program-Employment Law, are electives for later year students. Students can take a course in either session. All courses are available over summer. Students take instructions from clients, prepare necessary documents, undertake legal research and are assist in the preparation of any court hearings. In this way, students can consolidate their study of the law by practical application. Small group classes, daily tutorials and constant consultation with the clinical supervisors who are practising lawyers provide an opportunity for students to analyse both their role as lawyers and the role of law in society. Over 60 volunteer solicitors and barristers participate in public advice sessions in the evenings and provide a legal mentoring scheme for students at the Centre.

All students enrolled in the course LAWS6210 Law Lawyers and Society participate in an advice session at the Centre working with volunteer lawyers who provide advice to clients.

The Centre is an internationally recognised Centre of excellence in clinical teaching and produces biannual Guides To Australian Clinical Legal Education.

In its community legal centre function the Centre has been prominent in several areas, particularly anti-discrimination, legal aid and domestic violence. Students are also involved in reform campaigns, policy work and education services to the local community.

For further information contact the Centre: Faculty of Law Building, Lower Campus Ground Floor, University of NSW, UNSW Sydney NSW 2052 Australia, telephone (02) 9385 9566, fax (02) 9385 9583, TTY (02) 9385 9572, email legal@unsw.edu.au.
students

National Children's and Youth Law Centre

The National Children's and Youth Law Centre is a community legal centre which aims to promote the rights and interests of children and young people throughout Australia. The Centre commenced in 1993 as a joint project of the University of New South Wales, the University of Sydney, and the Public Interest Advocacy Centre. The Centre occupies premises provided by UNSW in the new Law School, lower campus, UNSW.

The Centre has a website (www.lawstuff.org.au) which provides legal information to young people on a broad number of issues in an accessible, colourful and approachable format, in addition to an email facility (LawMail) where young people may email the Centre for advice, information or referral from solicitors.

For further information contact the Centre:
Telephone (02) 9385 9588 fax (02) 9385 9589 or email ncylc@unsw.edu.au, website www.ncylc.org.au

National Pro Bono Resource Centre

The National Pro Bono Resource Centre (NPBRC) was established in August 2002 as an initiative of the Commonwealth Attorney-General. The Centre's main objective is to promote and support high quality pro bono services in Australia. Funded by the Commonwealth and State and Territory Attorney-Generals' Departments, the NPBRC aims to meet its objectives by:
  • producing materials and setting up systems which will be of practical assistance to pro bono providers and people and organisations that are likely to benefit from pro bono services;
  • investigating, developing and promoting ways of delivering pro bono that provide maximum benefit to disadvantaged communities and individuals;
  • promoting discussion and information exchange including through a website (www.nationalprobono.org.au), an e-newsletter and conferences;
  • addressing barriers to effective pro bono including advocating changes to the legal system that will facilitate pro bono; and
  • undertaking consultation and research that will support the promotion of effective pro bono work.
For further information contact the Centre:
Telephone (02) 9385 7381 or email info@nationalprobono.org.au

Social Justice Project

The Social Justice Project grew out of a desire to strengthen the work of a number of centres which are part of or affiliated with the Faculty and which are concerned with issues of social policy and socio-legal studies in the broad social justice area. These include the Australian Human Rights Centre, Indigenous Law Centre, National Children's and Youth Law Centre, Cyberspace Law and Policy Centre and the Diplomacy Training Program.

The Social Justice Project (SJP) was established by its Director, Prof Julian Disney, in 2000. Through the project, he undertakes and coordinates research, writing and advocacy on a range of issues affecting social justice in Australia and overseas.

The Director works with paid and honorary consultants and also provides internships for students in the Law Faculty. Most activities are undertaken in cooperation with non-governmental organisations at state, national and international levels

The principal areas of work undertaken through or in association with the project in recent years have included social justice aspects of housing and urban development, poverty reduction, tax reform and global governance.

Within these specialist areas, activities include undertaking research, writing articles, publishing papers and books, organising seminars and workshops, making written and oral submissions, and chairing delegations and conferences.

Professor Disney also provides advice to the Dean in relation to other developments that the Faculty may consider to strengthen its research, teaching and community service role in the social justice area.

Postgraduate Information

URL for this page:

© The University of New South Wales (CRICOS Provider No.: 00098G), 2004-2011. The information contained in this Handbook is indicative only. While every effort is made to keep this information up-to-date, the University reserves the right to discontinue or vary arrangements, programs and courses at any time without notice and at its discretion. While the University will try to avoid or minimise any inconvenience, changes may also be made to programs, courses and staff after enrolment. The University may also set limits on the number of students in a course.