School of Law

Our students experience a supportive and vibrant environment, and learn to expand their world view.

The School of Law offers students a setting rich in history and diversity.

We ensure that our graduates satisfy the requirements for legal practice and that they view the law not only as an end in itself but also as a vehicle for making society fairer in Tasmania, Australia and globally.

We have a strong research focus on environmental and Antarctic Law, human rights and criminology. In addition, the Law School houses the Centre for Law and Genetics as well as the Tasmania Law Reform Institute.

Graduates from the School have pursued a wide variety of careers encompassing all forms of legal practice, as well as engaging in business, industry, government, politics strategy, journalism, Law reform, publishing and academia. We’ve also produced many governors and premiers of Tasmania.

Contact us Our people

Study with us

Experience

For over 125 years, Australia’s fourth-oldest Law School has built an enviable reputation of distinction in teaching and research, with its boutique size and personalised focus.

Careers

After successfully completing the Bachelor of Laws, students can apply for the six-month Graduate Diploma of Legal Practice and be admitted to legal practice.

Connections

As Tasmania’s only tertiary educator in law, we are closely connected to the State’s legal profession, legal institutions and judiciary. Joining one of the world’s leading Law programs will set you up for the legal profession globally.

Our courses

Student opportunities and engagement

TULS is a student-run society that focusses their efforts on events and opportunities for law students, but welcomes any University of Tasmania student to join.

Learn more about TULS

Enables students to experience the practice of international law and policy first-hand, through legal research, analysis and service in the public interest.

Learn more about the IJI

Check out the TULS guide for students about the opportunities to pursue social justice and gain valuable practical legal skills while at law school.

Learn more about volunteering

COMET is a social justice initiative powered by law students that aims to empower disadvantaged youth through the teaching of key criminal law concepts.

Learn more about COMET

The Law School offers opportunities in advocacy both within the curriculum and as extracurricular activities. There are also internal competitions organised by TULS.

Learn more about competitions

Clinical Legal Education offers students the opportunity to gain real-world legal experience during their undergraduate degree, as well as the chance to improve the lives of others by supporting individuals and community groups to access justice. This experience is available to penultimate and final-year law students with good academic results who want to make a positive impact.

Learn more about Clinical Legal Education

Scholarships, fees and costs - opportunities and more information

Sandy Duncanson Social Justice Scholarship

More Postgraduate / Research Degree Prizes

The 2025 application period is now open for current students and will close at 5:00pm on Friday 23rd May 2025. To apply, complete the Law Postgraduate Prizes Application Form (PDF 201KB)

Please email applications to Law.Admin@utas.edu.au.

Andrew Inglis Clark has been described as the 'true architect of the Australian Constitution'. He was a distinguished lawyer, the Attorney-General of Tasmania, a parliamentarian, a member of the various conventions which created the federal constitution and the Vice-Chancellor of the University of Tasmania.

This Scholarship is available to a student who has completed undergraduate study in law, history or classics at honours level and who is undertaking studies towards a higher degree in law, history or legal history at the University of Tasmania. It is also available to a University of Tasmania student who is undertaking studies towards a higher degree in law or history at an overseas tertiary institution approved by the relevant University of Tasmania school or faculty.

John Francis Arthur Burke was born in Tasmania and educated at St Virgil's College in Hobart. He worked most of his life as a general and psychiatric nurse in the New South Wales health System.

In his estate, Mr Burke arranged to endow a scholarship in the Faculty of Law to allow graduates of the Faculty of pursue postgraduate study in the United Kingdom. This scholarship is valued at approximately $5000.

The McDougall Postgraduate Scholarship is available to students who have completed a Bachelor of Law with Honours (or its equivalent); or a Masters of Laws at an approved tertiary institution and who wish to undertake studies towards a higher degree in Law at the University of Tasmania; or graduates of the University of Tasmania who wish to undertake studies towards a higher degree in Law at an Australian or overseas tertiary institution. The award is not available to full-time academic staff or previously successful applicants.

The total value of the Scholarship is determined annually but is expected to in the region of approximately $7,500.

This scholarship was established to honour the memory of the late Frank Neasey AO. Neasey was an honours graduate in Law at the University of Tasmania, a respected legal practitioner, and a distinguished judge of the Supreme Court of Tasmania for 27 years.

This scholarship is available to a student who has completed the Bachelor of Laws with Honours (or its equivalent) or Masters of Laws at an approved tertiary institution, to undertake studies towards a higher degree in law at the University of Tasmania.

This scholarship is valued at approximately $500.

The Sir Henry Baker Memorial Fellowship is available to graduates of the University of Tasmania for study or research in the disciplines of Law or Political Science. The Fellowship may be held in conjunction with other awards and is available either on a full-time or part-time basis. It is tenable at the University of Tasmania or, with the approval of the Selection Committee, at an interstate or overseas institution.

The rules of the award are sufficiently flexible to allow for applications from postgraduate students seeking support for higher degree studies as well as practitioners in law, administration and related fields wishing to make shorter-term investigations of some aspect of professional practice.

While the Selection Committee may support a general program, preference is normally given to applicants who propose to undertake a specific project in an area of study that is of particular benefit to Australia.

The Selection Committee will determine the duration and value of the award according to the circumstances of the particular application and the research project.

The total value of the Fellowship is determined annually but is expected to be in the region of approximately $2,500.

The Kate Warner AC Prize is available to students who are undertaking studies towards a higher degree in Law at the University of Tasmania. To be eligible for this prize, students must not have received a full-time postgraduate scholarship. The applicant’s financial situation will also be taken into account.

The total value of the prize is to be determined annually based on the accumulated capital funds and interest earnings. The Faculty may, when appropriate, contribute additional funds to the capital amount.

The spirit of this prize is to enable disadvantaged students to undertake or complete their postgraduate studies with the Faculty of Law who would otherwise struggle financially to do so.
Rules:

  1. The original endowment together with any accumulation of income from time to time added shall form the fund known as the Kate Warner Fund.
  2. The income from the Fund shall be used to provide one or more prizes to be awarded to students to undertake postgraduate studies towards a higher degree in any field of Law at the University of Tasmania.
  3. The prize will be awarded to students who have not received a full-time postgraduate scholarship. It will also take into account: (a) the student’s economic and personal circumstances; and (b) other available funds, including scholarships and prizes, to which the student has access.
  4. Awards of the prize shall be made by the Postgraduate Scholarships Committee of the Faculty of Law (‘the Committee’).
  5. An award shall be tenable for a period of time determined by the Committee.
  6. For the purposes of the award, a student is a person who has been accepted into Law postgraduate studies at the University of Tasmania.
  7. The value of the prize shall be determined by the Committee taking account of advice from the Scholarship and Prizes Office regarding the income of the fund.
  8. The Committee will also determine all other matters concerning the scholarship – including the frequency of awards, the closing date for applications, and the criteria and method of selection.

LawFest aims to inspire year 11 and 12 students to explore and question topical legal issues.

Designed in collaboration with Tasmanian Legal Studies school teachers, the School of Law, and the School of Social Sciences, LawFest aligns with the Tasmanian Legal Studies curriculum.

Our research

Law, crime and justice lie at the heart of many of the complex challenges of our time. Our researchers have a deep commitment to social and criminal justice exemplified by the work of the Tasmania Law Reform Institute. Individual staff also specialise in contemporary legal research areas including law and genetics; environmental, Antarctic, marine and climate law; human rights and international law.

Find out more about Arts, Law and Education research

Publications

Law School Publications 2024 (PDF 89.8 KB)

  • Bernard Cairns, Australian civil procedure (Lawbook Co, 13th ed, 2024)
  • Gino Dal Pont, Confidentiality in litigation: Undertakings, privilege and open justice
  • (LexisNexis Butterworths, 2024)
  • Gino Dal Pont, Lawyers’ professional responsibility (Thomson Reuters Australia Ltd, 8th ed, 2024)
  • Manon Simon, Learning from weather modification law for the governance of regional solar radiation management (Springer International, 2024)
  • Matthew Killingsworth and Tim McCormack (eds), Civility, barbarism and the evolution of international humanitarian law (Cambridge University Press, 2024)
  • Tim McCormack and Narrelle Morris (eds), Law reports of Australia’s war crimes trials 1945-51: Volume I – Darwin, Morotai; Wewak and Labuan (Brill Nijhoff: Leiden (2024)
  • Shirley V Scott, Tim Stephens and Jeffrey McGee (eds), Geopolitical change and the Antarctic Treaty System: Historical lessons, current challenges (Springer, 2024)
  • Kay Wilson, Yvette Maker, Piers Gooding and Jamie Walvisch (eds), The future of mental health, disability and criminal law (Routledge, 2024)
  • Amander T Clark, Mubeen Goolam, Jacob H Hanna, Katie Long, Dianne Nicol, Sophie Petropoulos, Mitinori Saitou, Patrick PL Tam and Hongmei Wang, ‘Human developmental biology - A global perspective’ (2024) 151 (17) Development
  • Ami Stott, Evanthia O Madelli, Tiffany Boughtwood, Kristen J Nowak, Margaret Otlowski and Jane Tiller, ‘Health professionals contacting patients’ relatives directly about genetic risk (with patient consent): Current clinical practice and perspectives’ (2024) 33(4) European Journal of Human Genetics 476
  • Anja Hilkemeijer and Cleo Hansen-Lohrey, ‘The diverging approaches of two superior courts on “standing” and environmental organisations’ (2024) 38(7/8) Australian Environment Review 154
  • Becky Freeman, Matthew J Peters, Renee Bittoun, Richard Brightwell, Dallas R English, David P Thomas, Margaret Otlowski, Nicholas A Zwar and Catherine Chamberlain, ‘National Health and Medical Research Council statement on electronic cigarettes: 2022 update’ (2024) 220(2) The Medical Journal of Australia 100
  • Brad Elphinstone, Jarrod Walshe, Dianne Nicol and Mark Taylor, ‘Towards a trusted genomics repository: Identifying commercialisation fears and preferred forms of governance across segments of the community’ (2024) 34(3) Public Understanding of Science 325
  • Brooke A Williams, Carla L Archibald, James Brazill-Boast, Michael J Drielsma, Rajesh Thapa, Jamie Love, Frankie HT Cho, Daniel Lunney, James A Fitzsimons, Md Sayed Iftekhar, Jaramar Villarreal-Rosas, Sarah Bekessy, Scott Benitez Hetherington, Clive A Mcalpine, Linda J Beaumont, Jillian Thonell and Jonathan R Rhodes, ‘Optimal investments in private land conservation depend more on landholder preferences than climate change’ (2024) 19(12) Environmental Research Letters 124047
  • David Cantor, Bruce Burson, Brian Aycock, Nikolas Tan, Thekli Anastasiou, Emily Arnold-Fernandez, Carla Field, Cleo Hansen-Lohrey, Walter Kälin, Gillian Kane, Steve Miron, Malavika Rao, Beatriz Sánchez Mojica, Chiara Scissa, Sanjula Weerasinghe and Tamara Wood, ‘International protection, disasters and climate change’ (2024) 36(1-2) International Journal of Refugee Law 176
  • Deborah Gleeson, James Scheibner, Brigitte Frances Tenni, Belinda Townsend and Dianne Nicol, ‘Pandemic agreement must include levers to redirect pharmaceutical industry behaviour during pandemics: Comment on "more pain, more gain! The delivery of COVID-19 vaccines and the pharmaceutical industry's role in widening the access gap’ (2024) 13 International Journal of Health Policy and Management 8589
  • Dianne Nicol and Jane Nielsen, Data ownership in genomic research consortia’ (2024) 11(2) Journal of Law and the Biosciences lsae024
  • Dianne Nicol, Jane Nielsen and Madeleine Archer, ‘Data access arrangements in genomic research consortia’ (2024) 14 Scientific Reports
  • Dianne Nicol, Margaret Otlowski, Keeley Reade, Natalie Thorne and Clara Gaff, ‘Moving genomics into the clinic: Platforms for implementing clinical genomic data-sharing in ways that address ethical, legal and social implications’ (2024) 31 Journal of Law and Medicine 258
  • Didu S Kariyawasam, Joanne Scarfe, Christian Meagher, Michelle A Farrar, Kaustav Bhattacharya, Stacy M Carter, Ainsley J Newson, Margaret Otlowski, Jo Watson, Nicole Millis and Sarah Norris, ‘Integrating ethics and equity with economics and effectiveness for newborn screening in the genomic age: A qualitative study protocol of stakeholder perspectives’ (2024) 19(3) Plos One e0299336
  • Gino Dal Pont, ‘“Professional Misconduct” at Common Law – Is There such a Thing as "Professional Misconduct?”’ (March 2024) 98(3) Law Institute Journal 53
  • Gino Dal Pont, ‘Concepts of “Misconduct”’ (May 2024) 98(5) Law Institute Journal 50
  • James A Fitzsimons and Brent Mitchell, ‘Research priorities for privately protected areas’ (2024) 5 Frontiers in Conservation Science 1340887
  • James A Fitzsimons, Fiona Valesini, Simon Branigan and Boze Hancock, ‘Continental-scale shellfish reef restoration in Australia’ (2024) 3 Npj Ocean Sustainability 62
  • James A Fitzsimons, Sue Stolton, Nigel Dudley and Brent Mitchell, ‘Clarifying “long-term” for protected areas and other effective area-based conservation measures (OECMs): why only 25 years of “intent” does not qualify’ (2024) 30 Parks 89
  • James A Fitzsimons, Sue Stolton and Miquel Rafa, ‘Editorial: Advances in privately protected areas’ (2024) 5 Frontiers in Conservation Science 1441046
  • James A Fitzsimons, Thalie Partridge and Rebecca Keen, ‘Other effective area-based conservation measures (OECMs) in Australia: Key considerations for assessment and implementation’ (2024) 4 Conservation 176
  • Jane Nielsen and Dianne Nicol, ‘Data Ownership in Genomic Research Consortia’ (2024) 11(2) Journal of Law and the Biosciences
  • Jane M Tiller, Ami Stott, Keri Finlay, Tiffany Boughtwood, Evanthia O Madelli, Ari Horton, Ingrid Winship, Kristen Nowak and Margaret Otlowski, ‘Direct notification by health professionals of relatives at-risk of genetic conditions (with patient consent): Views of the Australian public’ (2024) 32(1) European Journal of Human Genetics 98
  • Jane Tiller, Andrew Bakshi, Grace Dowling, Louise Keogh, Aideen McInerney-Leo, Kristine Barlow-Stewart, Tiffany Boughtwood, Penny Gleeson, Martin B Delatycki, Ingrid Winship, Margaret Otlowski, Paul Lacaze, ‘Community concerns about genetic discrimination in life insurance persist in Australia: A survey of consumers offered genetic testing’ (2024) 32(3) European Journal of Human Genetics 286
  • Jane Tiller, Keri Finlay, Evanthia O Madelli, Melissa Monnik, Matilda R Jackson, Nicola Poplawski, Tiffany Boughtwood, Kristen J Nowak and Margaret Otlowski, ‘Patients’ perspectives regarding health professionals contacting their relatives about genetic risk directly (with patient consent)’ (2024) 33 European Journal of Human Genetics 485
  • Jarrod Walshe, Brad Elphinstone, Dianne Nicol and Mark Taylor, ‘A systematic literature review of the “commercialisation effect” on public attitudes towards biobank and genomic data repositories’ (2024) 33(5) Public Understanding of Science 548
  • Jennifer Boocock, Jan McDonald and Phillipa C McCormack, ‘Public health: A forgotten piece of the adaptation law puzzle’ (2024) 6 Frontiers in Climate 1355793
  • Jeremy Prichard, Richard Wortley, Paul Watters, Caroline Spiranovic and Joel Scanlan, ‘The effect of therapeutic and deterrent messages on Internet users attempting to access “barely legal” pornograph’ (2024) 155 Child Abuse and Neglect 106955
  • John Kenny, Michael Bird, Jill Blackmore, Robyn Brandenburg, Dianne Nicol, Kurt Seemann, Bing Wang, Trevor Wilmshurst, ‘Putting a stake in the ground: The development of a professional ethical framework for Australian academics’ (2024) Higher Education
  • Justine Bell-James, Rose Foster, Nicole Shumway, Catherine E Lovelock, Jaramar Villarreal-Rosas, Christopher J Brown, Dominic A Andradi-Brown, Megan I Saunders, Nathan J Waltham and James A Fitzsimons, ‘The Global Biodiversity Framework's ecosystem restoration target requires more clarity and careful legal interpretation’ (2024) 8 Nature Ecology and Evolution 840
  • Kate Diesfeld, Kathryn Hollingsworth, Nina (Christina) Hudson, Stephen Tang and Mark Nolan, ‘Introduction to the special issue on judicial and lawyer well-being and stress’ (2024) 31(3) Psychiatry Psychology and Law 315
  • Kerryn Brent, Manon Simon and Jan McDonald, ‘From informal to formal governance of solar radiation management’ (2024) Climate Policy 1
  • Lyndsay Newett, Rebekah McWhirter, LisaEckstein, Vanessa Warren and Dianne Nicol, ‘Australian attitudes towards waivers of consent within the context of genomic data sharing’ (2024) 19 Journal of Empirical Research on Human Research Ethics 113
  • Mark Rothstein, Kelly Carty Zimmerer, Pamela Andanda, Thalia Arawi, Fabiana Arzuaga, Haidan Chen, Martine de Vries, Edward S Dove, Mohammed Ghaly, Ryoko Hatanaka, Aart C Hendriks, Mireya Castañeda Hernández, Calvin WL Ho, Yann Joly, Dorota Krekora-Zajac, Won Bok Lee, Titti Mattsson, Fruzsina Molnár-Gábor, Kakai Namalwa, Pilar Nicolás, Jane Nielsen, Obiajulu Nnamuchi, Margaret Otlowski, Nicole Palmour, Emmanuelle Rial-Sebbag, Gil Siegal, Jane M Wathuta, Ma'n Zawati and Bartha Knoppers, ‘International scope of biomedical research ethics review’ (2024) 385(6705) Science 145
  • Mengqi Hu, Dan Santos, Edilene Lopes, Dianne Nicol, Andreas Kurtz, Nancy Mah, Sabine Muller, Rachel A Ankeny and Christine Wells, ‘Australian researchers ' perceptions and experiences with stem cell registration’ (2024) 79 Stem Cell Research 103482
  • Natalie Stoeckl, Vanessa Adams, Rachel Baird, Anne Boothroyd, Robert Costanza, Darla Hatton MacDonald, Glenn Finau, Elizabeth A Fulton, Matthew A King, Ida Kubiszewski, Delphine Lannuzel, Elizabeth Leane, Jessica Melbourne-Thomas, Can Seng Ooi, Mala Raghavan, Valeria Senigaglia, Jing Tian and Satoshi Yamazaki, ‘The value of Antarctic and Southern Ocean ecosystem services’ (2024) 5 Nature Reviews Earth and Environment 153
  • Peter Lawrence, ‘The International Court of Justice advisory opinion on climate change and future generations’ (2024) 8(2) Chinese Journal of Environmental Law 284
  • Phillipa C McCormack, Afshin Akhtar-Khavari and Benjamin J Richardson, ‘Transformation in the forest: The role for restoration in the transition away from native forestry in Australia’ (2024) 32(7) Restoration Ecology e14240
  • Phillipa C McCormack, Rebecca K Miller and Jan McDonald, ‘Prescribed burning on private land: reflections on recent law reform in Australia and California’ (2024) 33 International Journal of Wildland Fire WF22213
  • Pratap Devarapalli, Seema Soni and Saurabh Yadav, ‘A patinformatics perspective of tomato flu and coxsackie viruses’ (2024) 3 The Microbe 100060
  • Rachel Baird and Natalie Stoeckl, ‘Antarctica provides at least $276 billion a year in economic benefits to the world, new research finds’ (2024) The Conversation
  • Robin Banks, Alice Taylor and Beth Goldblatt, ‘A lounge of one's own: Art, gender, discrimination and the law’ (2024) 49(3) Alternative Law Journal 234
  • S Price, N McKillop, Joel Scanlan, S Rayment-McHugh, L Christensen and Jeremy Prichard, ‘A review of digital interventions as secondary prevention measures to combat online child sexual abuse perpetration’ (2024) 33(7) Journal of Child Sexual Abuse 869
  • Tatiane Yanes, Jane Tiller, Casey Haining, Courtney Wallingford, Margaret Otlowski, Louise Keogh, Aideen McInerney-Leo and Paul Lacaze, ‘Future implications of polygenic risk scores for life insurance underwriting’ (2024) 9:25 Npj Genomic Medicine
  • Tatiane Yanes, Marisa Blencoe, Antonia Howard, Jane Tiller, Courtney Wallingford, Margaret Otlowski, Louise Keogh, Paul Lacaze and Aideen McInerney-Leo, ‘Australian researcher's perspectives on the Australian industry-led moratorium on genetic tests in life insurance’ (2024) 194(6) American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A e63565
  • Tim McCormack, ‘The 2023 Annual Kirby International Law Lecture: The International Criminal Court and global criminal justice: Are we making progress?’ (2024) 42 Australian Yearbook of International Law 1
  • Abbey MacDonald, Annalise Rees, Jan Hogan and Benjamin J Richardson, ‘“Becoming ecological” for nature conservation: Insights from two museums in the island state of lutruwita / Tasmania, Australia’ in Patricia Osler, Boyd White and Anita Sinner (eds), Propositions for museum education: International art educators in conversation (Intellect, 2024)
  • Emille Boulot and Joshua Sterlin, ‘Ecological restoration at three Australian regulatory sites: Opportunities for a law beyond the human?’ in G Garver (ed), Ecological law in practice: Case studies for a transformative approach (Routledge, 2024)
  • Emille Boulot and Joshua Sterlin, ‘Opportunities for a law beyond the human?’ in G Garver (ed), Ecological law in practice: Case studies for a transformative approach (Routledge, 2024)
  • JaneNielsen,Dianne Nicol and Cameron Stewart,‘The Australian “Valley of Death”? Australian Research and Patenting Practices in Bioprinting and Genome Editing’ in E Derclaye (ed), Research Handbook on Empirical Studies in IP Law (Edward Elgar, 2023) 47
  • Jeannie Paterson and Yvette Maker, ‘Consumer protection law and AI’ in Ernest Lim and Phillip Morgan (eds), The Cambridge Handbook of Private Law and Artificial Intelligence (Cambridge University Press, 2024) 113
  • Jeffrey McGee, David Edmiston and Marcus Haward, ‘Classical geopolitics and Antarctica’ in Shirley V Scott, Tim Stephens, and Jeffrey McGee (eds), Geopolitical change and the Antarctic Treaty System: Historical lessons, current challenges (Springer Polar Sciences, Springer, 2024) 251
  • Jeffrey McGee, David Edmiston, Marcus Haward, ‘Non-militarisation of Antarctica: Geopolitical foundations and challenges’ in Shirely V Scott, Tim Stephens and Jeffrey McGee (eds), Geopolitical change and the Antarctic Treaty System: Historical lessons, current challenges (Springer Polar Sciences, Springer 2024)
  • Kate Warner, ‘Criminal justice then and now’ in Trischa Mann (ed), Enduring courts in changing times: Celebrating the 2024 bicentenaries of the Supreme Courts of New South Wales and Tasmania, Sydney, Australian Academy of Law (Ingram Spark, 2024) 187
  • Kay Wilson, Yvette Maker, Piers Gooding and Jamie Walvisch, ‘What is the future of mental health, disability and criminal law?’ in Kay Wilson, Yvette Maker, Piers Gooding and Jamie Walvisch (eds), The future of mental health, disability and criminal law (Routledge, 2024) 1
  • Matt Killingsworth and Tim McCormack, ‘Civility, Barbarism and the Evolution of International Humanitarian Law’ in Matt Killingsworth and Tim McCormack, Civility, barbarism and the evolution of international humanitarian law (Cambridge University Press, 2024) 1
  • Olivia Rundle, ‘Assessing parenting payment applications by parents' individual circumstances, not their relationship status’ in Becky Batagol, Jamie Walvisch, Kate Seear and Heli Askola (eds), The Feminist Legislation Project (Routledge, 2024)
  • Piers Gooding and Yvette Maker, ‘The digital turn in mental health and disability law: Actuarial traditions and AI futures of risk assessment from a human rights perspective’ in Kay Wilson, Yvette Maker, Piers Gooding and Jamie Walvisch (eds), The future of mental health, disability and criminal law (Routledge, 2024) 244
  • Pratap Devarapalli and Dara Ajay, ‘The impact of 3D bioprinting innovation on IP ecosystem and patent law: An Indian and US perspective’ in K Singh, N Chongtham, R Trikha, M Bhardwaj and S Kaur (eds), Science, Technology and Innovation Ecosystem: An Indian and Global Perspective (Springer, Singapore 2024) 197
  • Rachel Baird, ‘The CAMLR Convention and IUU Fishing’ in Shirley V Scott, Tim Stephens, and Jeffrey McGee (eds), in Geopolitical change and the Antarctic Treaty System: Historical lessons, current challenges (Springer, 2024) 71
  • Shirley V Scott, Tim Stephens and Jeffrey McGee, ‘The Antarctic treaty system in the context of geopolitical, technological and environmental change’ in Shirley V Scott, Tim Stephens and Jeffrey McGee (eds), Geopolitical change and the Antarctic Treaty System: Historical lessons, current challenges (Springer Polar Sciences, Springer 2024)
  • Tim McCormack, Siobhain Galea and Dan Westbury, ‘Limits to the scope of humanity as a constraint on the conduct of war’ in Matt Killingsworth and Tim McCormack (eds), Civility, barbarism and the evolution of international humanitarian law (Cambridge University Press, 2024) 85
  • Tim Stephens and Jeffrey McGee, ‘Synthesis and lessons drawn’ in Shirley V Scott, Tim Stephens and Jeffrey McGee (eds), Geopolitical change and the Antarctic Treaty System: Historical lessons, current challenges (Springer Polar Sciences, Springer 2024)
  • Yann Joly, Edward Dove, Bartha Knoppers and Dianne Nicol, ‘The GA4GH regulatory and ethics work stream (REWS) at 10: An interdisciplinary, participative approach to international policy development in Genomics’ in Marcelo Corrales Compagnucci, Timo Minssen, Mark Fenwick, Mateo Aboy and Kathleen Liddell (eds), The law and ethics of data sharing in health sciences (Perspectives in Law, Business and Innovation) (Springer, 2024) 13
  • James A Fitzsimons, Sue Stolton, Nigel Dudley and Brent Mitchell, Defining ‘long-term’ for protected areas and other effective area-based conservation measures (OECMs). Technical Note No. 14. Gland, Switzerland: IUCN World Commission on Protected Areas (2024)
  • Joel Scanlan, Jeremy Prichard, Lauren Hall, Paul Watters and Richard Wortley,
  • reThink Chatbot Evaluation (2024)
  • Sentencing Advisory Council (Matias Thomsen), Prejudice and discrimination as aggravating factors in sentencing Final Report, February 2024
  • Stan Stevens, Terence Hay-Edie, Carmen Miranda Larrea, Ameyali Ramos and Neema Pathak Broome, (eds) with contributions by Cristina Eghenter, James A Fitzsimons,
  • Irakli Goradze, Jeremy Ironside, Charlotte Mellis, Steven Nitah, Phillipine Parling, Giovanii Reyes and Glaiza Tabanao, Recognising territories and areas conserved by Indigenous peoples and local communities (ICCAs) overlapped by protected areas. IUCN WCPA Good Practice Guidelines No 34. Gland, Switzerland: IUCN (2024)
  • Tasmanian Law Reform Institute (Jemma Holt and Rebecca Bradfield), An evaluation of the pre-recorded evidence scheme in Tasmania (Research Paper No 7, 2024)
  • Tasmanian Law Reform Institute (Yvette Maker and Rebecca Bradfield), Review of privacy laws in Tasmania (Final Report No 33, May 2024)
  • Tasmanian Law Reform Institute, A charter of human rights for Tasmania? Update (Research Paper No. 6, April 2024)
  • Tim McCormack, Indira Rosenthal, Susan Banks, Robin Banks, Cleo Hansen-Lohrey, Tamara Wood, Taya Ketelaar-Jones, Maggie Blanden, Wynne Russell, Gender Persecution: Voices from Lutruwita (2024, Outside the Box / Earth Arts Rights for MADRE)
  • Yvette Maker, Expectations on the treatment of people deprived of their liberty in health and social care: Aged residential care, disability support and related services Consultation Draft (Tasmanian National Preventive Mechanism, 2024)
  • Anja Hilkemeijer and Emille Boulot, Submission on Tasmanian Civil and Administrative Tribunal (Additional Jurisdictions) Bill 2024 (2024)
  • Anja Hilkemeijer, Jan McDonald, Cleo Hansen-Lohrey, Emille Boulot and Phillipa C McCormack, Submission on land use planning and approval amendment (Development Assessment Panels) Bill 2024 (2024)
  • Anja Hilkemeijer, Jan McDonald, Emille Boulot and Cleo Hansen-Lohrey,
  • Submission on the Validation (State Coastal Policy) Bill 2024 (2024)
  • Emille Boulot, Anja Hilkemeijer, Phillipa C McCormack, Cleo Hansen-Lohrey, Jan McDonald and Benjamin J Richardson, submission paper, Reserve Activity Assessment (RAA) Consultation (2024)
  • Jan McDonald, Anja Hilkemeijer, Emille Boulot and Cleo Hansen-Lohrey, Submission on the Amendment of the State Coastal Policy 1996 -Development on Actively Mobile Landforms Position Paper (2024)
  • Manon Simon, Australian Forum for Climate Intervention Governance, Comments on NOAA’s Petition for Rulemaking: Maintaining Records and Submitting Reports on Weather Modification Activities (NOAA-OAR-2024-0091) (2004)
  • Margaret Otlowski, Jane Nielsen, Dianne Nicol and Rebekah McWhirter Centre for Law and Genetics Submission to Treasury Consultation on the use of genetic testing results in life insurance underwriting (2024)
  • Margaret Otlowski, Jane Nielsen, Rebekah McWhirter, Lisa Eckstein and Dianne Nicol Submission on the WHO Draft Principles for human genome access, use and sharing (2024)
  • Margaret Otlowski, Robin Banks and Ainsley Newson, Submission to the Treasury Consultation on the use of genetic testing results in life insurance underwriting (2024)
  • Robin Banks, Submission to the Inquiry into the Conduct of the 2024 House of Assembly General Election and 2024 Legislative Council elections (2024)
  • Robin Banks, Submission No 25, Submission to the Inquiry into Electoral Amendment Bill 2024 (2024)
  • Yvette Maker, Submission to the United Nations Working Group on discrimination against women and girls’ Report on the gendered dimensions of care and support systems (2024)

If you have a current University of Tasmania login, you can access electronic versions of most of the above materials through the University of Tasmania Library search using the title. For books, the Library may also hold a print copy that can be accessed by staff, students, alumni and the community (as a community borrower).