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In The Spotlight
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Legal Research Skills Expert Joins Law School

Legal Research Skills Expert Joins Law School


She has provided legal research training to judges, articled clerks, Law Reform Commissions, government departments and the Leo Cussen Institute – and now Melbourne Law students and staff are benefiting from Natalie Wieland’s expertise in her new role as Legal Research Skills Advisor at the Law School.

A practising solicitor for two years, initially in commercial law and then in family and criminal law, Natalie also worked in a voluntary capacity at Port Melbourne legal advisory service for 8 years. Upon completion of a Graduate Diploma in Management Information Systems, Natalie commenced training in legal research, initially with Computer Law Services and then Butterworths/LexisNexis, for three years. In 1999, Natalie established Bliss Consulting which provides legal research consulting services to the legal industry.

Natalie is available to give classroom presentations and/or hands-on database training sessions about different legal research topics. Staff at the Law Library Service Desk, the Melbourne Law Masters Office or the Student Centre can help students to book a half hour consultation with Natalie, who is located in Room 335 – Office of Teaching and Learning on the third floor of the Law Library. Natalie’s hours are Monday, Tuesday and Friday mornings and all day Wednesday. Her email address is nwieland@unimelb.edu.au.

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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.


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