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In The Spotlight
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Student Wins Industrial Relations Essay Prize

Student Wins Industrial Relations Essay Prize


A research assistant at Melbourne Law School’s Centre for Employment & Labour Relations Law has won a prize in the 2008 Industrial Relations Society of Victoria Student Essay Writing Competition.

Catherine Dow, who is in the second-last year of her Bachelor of Laws degree, submitted her essay about sexual harassment in the workplace, and the problems that women face both in law and practice. Her winning essay was entitled ‘The Placenta Posse and Menopausal Mafia Fight Back: Trivialised, naturalised, invisible, ignored: Exposing the Legislative and Operative Barriers to Combating Sex Harassment of Women in the Workplace.’

In addition to a monetary prize, Catherine received an invitation to the recently-held Industrial Relations Society of Victoria conference. Congratulations, Catherine!

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Law teaching in Australia began in 1857 at Melbourne Law School. In 2008, Melbourne Law School celebrates another first, becoming the first all-graduate law faculty in Australia: all entry level students are now admitted to the global standard, Juris Doctor (JD) degree. This new program builds on a rich tradition of success, which has enabled Melbourne Law School graduates to become leaders in legal, political and public life across Australia, and around the world.

The faculty is distinguished by its commitment to the integration of cutting-edge scholarship with teaching and knowledge transfer activities, and by its insistence on the critical importance of cross-disciplinary and comparative analysis across the full range of its degree programs. It is home to more than a dozen research institutes and groups, offering its students and staff both meaningful opportunities for and access to a rich and authentic communal life.


News and Events

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PhD Teaching Fellowships   Applications for 2009 close on 23 November 2008 15 Oct - 23 Nov.
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Thailand's Constitutional Watchdogs: More Bark than Bite?   Peter Leyland will discuss the various bodies which act as constitutional watchdogs in Thailand, assessing their performance, taking into account Thai values and the constitutional context. 1:00PM Wed 19 Nov.
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Talking to Ourselves: Should International Lawyers Take a Break from Feminism?   IILAH is pleased to invite you to a public seminar delivered by Professor Hilary Charlesworth (ANU) with Melbourne Law School's Dr Ann Genovese and Prof Dianne Otto acting as respondents 6:00PM Wed 19 Nov.
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Annual CMCL Conference - Media, Communications and Public Speech   This is the major annual academic conference for the Centre for Media and Communications Law with plenary speakers from Singapore, South Africa, UK, USA and Australia. 20-21 Nov.
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CHANCELLOR’S HUMAN RIGHTS LECTURE: Criminal Defence Lawyers: Unwitting Human Rights Defenders   The University of Melbourne’s 2008 Chancellor’s Lecture on Human Rights will this year be delivered by Justice Lex Lasry. The lecture will discuss the role that particular practitioners in the area of criminal law have played in terms of human rights issues, both in Victoria and more broadly. 6:30PM Mon 24 Nov.
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Inaugural Professorial Lecture: Professor Adrienne Stone   Prof Stone defends the practice of refering to international judgments in her lecture 'Foreign Law and Constitutional Interpretation: Cautious Comparativism or Judicial Activism?' 6:00PM Wed 26 Nov.
All forthcoming 2008 events, news and visitors...

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