twentieth anniversary booklet (pdf 1.15 mb)

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ANU COLLEGE OF LAW Centre for International and Public Law | Twentieth Anniversary 2010 1990

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Page 1: Twentieth Anniversary booklet (pdf 1.15 MB)

ANU COLLEGE OF LAW

Centre for International and Public Law | Twentieth Anniversary

20101990

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Centre for International and Public Law (CIPL)

2010 marks the Centre for International and Public Law's 20th Anniversary!

CIPL is delighted that each of CIPL's past Directors and Acting Directors and current Director, will reflect on their time as Director of the Centre and share their thoughts about how things have changed in their disciplines over the past 20 years.

The area that each Director will concentrate on is set out in the following:

ANU COLLEGE OF LAW PRESENTS:

Time: Tuesday 18 May 2010Venue: Law Theatre ANU College of LawDrinks: 4.30-5pm Seminar: 5-7pm

Twentieth Anniversary Event

Professor Philip Alston (1990-1995) Current Position: John Norton Pomeroy Professor of Law, NYU Faculty of Law Title: The Future of HR at the UN

Professor Julian Disney (1996-1997)Current Position: Director, The Social Justice Project, UNSWTitle: Global Governance

Professor Hilary Charlesworth (1998-2004) Current Position: Director, Centre for International Governance & Justice, ANU Title: International Human Rights Law in Australia

Interim Director Robin Creyke (Jan–Dec 2005)Current Position:Senior Member of the Commonwealth Administrative Appeals TribunalTitle: Risk Management in Public Law - a New Approach

Interim Director Andrew Byrnes (Aug-Dec 2004)Current Position: Professor of International Law UNSW Title: International Lawyers in the Australian Academy: Between the Market and the State

Professor Kim Rubenstein (2006-Current)Title: Citizenship and Nationality

The views expressed in this seminar are those of the presenters and do not necessarily represent the views of the ANU

ANU COLLEGE OF LAW http://law.anu.edu.au

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The First Twenty years of the Centre for International and Public Law (CIPL)

IntroductionThe first things that struck me when CIPL Director Profes-sor Kim Rubenstein invited me to prepare this brief survey of CIPL’s first 20 years were the extraordinary array of legal luminaries associated with CIPL over these 20 years and the prodigious output, not only in legal research of the highest quality but also in influential contributions to public policy debate. These contributions have continued unbroken from the first year to the present day.

The establishment of CIPL (initially the Centre for Advanced Legal Studies in International and Public Law) was first announced in Commitment to Change; the University’s 1988-92 Strategic Plan.

In approving the establishment of CIPL, the ANU Council adopted the following statement of the Centre’s purpose

[It] is to promote and develop research particularly into the law concerning the relations between governments at the international level and within Australia and the relations between citizens and governments . . .

Of course the proposal was not without opposition. Dennis Pearce, who was Dean at the relevant time, tells me that a member of the University Council argued that there was no role for a research chair in Law!

The DirectorsProfessor Philip Alston the first Director arrived in December 1989 and Professor Julian Disney, the Deputy Director and Director of the Public Law Program, came in December 1991.

Philip Alston, was recruited from Harvard Law School and his first year in office set a pattern of extraordinary activity

� an international law conference addressed by the Com-monwealth Attorney-General and a glittering array of international law luminaries including Oscar Schachter, Vaughan Lowe, Douglas Johnston, Alain Pellet, Don Greig, Ivan Shearer, Hazel Fox, Richard Lillich, Elizabeth Evatt, Hilary Charlesworth and Christine Chinkin.

� an administrative law conference addressed by a cor-respondingly distinguished group of speakers, including John Griffiths, John McMillan, Neil Williams, Bill Gum-mow and others (including myself). Many of the papers, including my own, are still cited today.

Professor Alston published widely and participated in numerous international activities especially in the human rights field including an authoritative commentary on the Convention on the Rights of the Child and a study for the UN Secretary-General on reforms of the UN’s human

rights treaty supervisory system. He chaired the UN Com-mittee on Economic Social and Cultural Rights.

Julian Disney brought an interdisciplinary approach to the Centre’s work. While the Centre was active in the traditional public law areas of constitutional law and administrative law, his own contributions focussed on the public law dimensions of issues such as taxation policy, parliamentary processes, the role of the legal profes-sion and the promotion of social justice. Indeed his work focussed on the policy dimensions of public law at a time when few legal scholars ventured beyond ‘black letter’ issues. He published numerous papers, made submis-sions to parliamentary inquiries and delivered numerous public lectures and conference presentations. Professor Disney maintained an especially high public profile, mak-ing regular important contribution to public social policy development. The Centre’s contributions to public policy development continue to this day.

By the end of its first 5 years, the Centre had published 16 books, produced 72 journal articles, organised more than 20 major conferences and delivered more than 150 addresses and presentations, an output rightly described as prodigious. Professor Alston resigned as Direc-tor at the end of 1995.

He was succeeded as Director by Professor Julian Disney

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who continued to develop his interdisciplinary approach to the Centre’s work. Professor Disney had organised in 1995 a seminar in Jakarta on Administrative Review in Australia and Indonesia and then in 1996 he oversaw a major expan-sion of the Centre’s membership- all members of the Law Faculty with a special interest in international or public law were drawn into the Centre. The Centre continued with its stimulating output under his Directorship until his resigna-tion in August 1997.

Professor Donald Greig acted as Director after Professor Disney’s resignation until February 1998 when Professor Hilary Charlesworth took up the position. Her interna-tional law research was wide-ranging, including human rights, feminist issues in international law, terrorism, globalisation and international law in security crises. Pro-fessor Charlesworth also chaired the ACT Bill of Rights Consultative Committee, a major contribution to public policy, and was a regular public speaker in many forums and during her directorship she brought out many signifi-cant international academics to contribute to the busy life of the Centre.

Following Professor Charlesworth’s move to Regnet in August 2004, Professor Andrew Byrnes and then Profes-sor Robin Creyke were interim Directors (with Penelope Mathew and Fiona Wheeler as Deputy Directors during

Robin’s stewardship), until the appointment of the cur-rent Director, Professor Kim Rubenstein who began at the beginning of 2006.

Like her predecessors, Professor Rubenstein has brought extraordinary energy to the Centre. Her announcements of forthcoming CIPL events, lectures, seminars, and visi-tors are now a regular feature of College morning teas. Professor Rubenstein has renewed the focus on the inter-section between international law and public law with a Cambridge University Press edited series flowing from annual CIPL workshops linking public law academics with international law academics. Her own research focuses on citizenship and nationality issues and she recently served on the Independent Committee appointed by the Minister for Immigration and Citizenship to review the Citizenship test under the Australian Citizenship Act 2007 (Cth). She is also keenly interested in appellate advocacy and has appeared in a number of High Court cases.

Research, publications, lectures, conferences and other activitiesResearch and PublicationsIn its second year the Centre assumed responsibility for the Australian Yearbook of International Law, a role which

continues. Philip Alston was co-editor from 1988 through to 1996 with Don Greig. Hilary Charlesworth was co-edi-tor with Professor Greig from 1996 to 1998, with Robert McCorqudale from 1999-2000, with Andrew Byrnes from 2001-2003 and then with Andrew Byrnes and Penelope Mathew in 2004 and 2005. Kim Rubenstein has been a co-editor since 2006, first with Penelope Mathew and with Don Rothwell since 2008.

The output of scholarly publications, books, papers, and articles continues to be prodigious. A series published by Federation Press, Law and Policy papers –published significant contributions to public understanding and discussion on matters relating to public policy. With the move to the new CIPL Cambridge University Press series Connecting International Law with Public the final pub-lication in the Law and Policy papers series was issued in 2008. Centre members have also been successful in obtaining important and prestigious ARC grants. The Centre has also benefitted form financial assistance from the Attorney-General’s Department, the Department of Foreign Affairs, foundations, publishers and law firms.

SeminarsAn International law Discussion Group was established in the early days, with participation drawn from Common-

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wealth Departments as well as the University. The Centre accepted responsibility for convening the Public Law and Public Administration Discussion Group. These two groups held regular evening seminars, providing impor-tant opportunities for discussion and exchanges between those working in the University and their professional counterparts in the Australian Public Service, particularly the Attorney-General’s Department and the Department of Foreign Affairs. Academics have been able to share their thinking and their research with practitioners and practitioners have been able to discuss current practi-cal developments with those working in the University. Initially participation was by invitation and the groups operated under Chatham House rules. These two groups continued under changing formats for many years. With the appointment of the current Director, work in the public law and international law fields has become more closely integrated and the two discussion groups have become subsumed in the Centre’s regular lunchtime and evening seminar series.

Major ConferencesFrom its inception the Centre has also been active in hosting major conferences, seminars and workshops. Centre members have contributed regularly to public and media presentations on contemporary issues. Contribu-

tions have often related to public policy development as well as to ‘black letter’ law. Indeed the scholarly output and the influences on public policy debates are out of all proportion to the Centre’s modest size and resources. Members have served as executive members of national and international organisations including the Australian Institute of Administrative Law, the Australian and New Zealand Society of International Law and numerous gov-ernment committees, tribunals and review bodies.

Two major conferences now well established on the aca-demic calendar warrant special mention.

ANZSILThe International Law Weekend was inaugurated in 1992 and the Australian and New Zealand Society of Interna-tional Law (ANZSIL) was established. CIPL has been the Secretariat for ANZSIL for most of ANZSIL’s life and CIPL has continued to assist ANZSIL convene the Society’s annual conference; a major landmark on the international law calendar (each third year the conference is held in New Zealand). One notable ANZSIL conference was held in 2000 which involved a joint conference of ANZSIL and the American Society of International Law; the first time ASIL had met in the southern hemisphere

Public law WeekendThe Public Law Weekend was first established in 1996 and like the International Law Weekend it has also became a landmark in the public law calendar. Initially the confer-ence rotated year by year between a constitutional law theme and an administrative law theme but has since evolved into a broad public law theme.

Annual lecturesThe Centre also hosts a prestigious series of annual lec-tures. The inaugural Geoffrey Sawer lecture in public law was given in 1998 by Sir Ninian Stephen. In 2000 the inaugural ‘Report from the United Nations’ was deliv-ered by Ambassador Penny Wensley. The inaugural Kirby lecture in International Law was delivered by Professor James Crawford in 2008. Each of these has continued with prestigious successor presenters.

ConclusionOne of the unique features of the Centre has been the early development of an integrated approach to interna-tional law and (domestic) public law. For example Julian Disney’s work in the fields of taxation and social justice incorporated work on global social justice and Philip Alston’s work on international human rights law took on

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a direct domestic dimension. Hilary Charlesworth, the Centre’s third Director emphasised the links between international and public law. Study of the interface between international and public law is one of the key interests of the Centre’s current Director, Kim Rubenstein with her yearly workshops linking public and interna-tional law scholars.

Each Director brings her or his own innovations. One of Kim Rubenstein’s, albeit regretfully short lived, was a regular and well attended afternoon tea to discuss cur-rent research (Kim’s fruit cake being a major drawcard). These have transformed into lunches when there is a fifth Friday in a month! The most recent involved CIPL student interns sharing with CIPL members the research they had undertaken during their internship. Another is the con-sideration of an advocacy role for CIPL in superior courts with a workshop run with Professor Noah Novogrodsky from the University of Toronto assessing the way Cen-tres can be involved in superior court litigation. Professor Rubenstein and I made an amicus application in the High Court in Wurridjal v The Commonwealth, a constitu-tional challenge to the Northern Territory intervention legislation, to test out the practical issues associated with progressing this idea. Consistently with the Centre’s interest in the relationship between international law and

public law, the amicus application focussed on the rele-vance of international law principles relating the rights of indigenous peoples to practice their religion and culture to the domestic constitutional issue whether the right to participate in ceremony on sacred sites constituted prop-erty for the purposes of s 51(xxxi) of the Constitution. Two members of the High Court supported the amicus application and one member of the Court referred exten-sively to the submissions in his judgment.

After 20 years, CIPL continues as an outstanding leader both in Australia and globally in legal research, publica-tions and as a contributor to public policy development. I congratulate it and wish it many more years of produc-tive output.

Ernst Willheim Visiting Fellow, ANU College of Law

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A selection of CIPL Publications from Philip Alston’s term

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Annual dinner, 1997 (L-R) M.Kirby, B.Rhanchod, J.Disney & P.Bailey

1995—1998

Australian–Indonesian Administrative Review Seminar, Jakarta, 1995 – J.Disney

A selection of CIPL photographs from 1995-present

Annual Public Law Weekend, 1997 (L-R) L.Zines, P.Johnston & J.Clarke

Commemorative dinner for Sir Daryl Dawson, 1997 (L-R) Lady Brennan, Sir G.Brennan & D.Cass

Philip Alston Seminar, 30 July 1998 (L-R) A.Kent & P.Alston

ANZSIL Conference, 19-21 June 1998 (L-R) C.Hutton, K.Booth, R.Butler, J.Larke, J.Braid, R.McCorquodale & J.Lapworth

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Inaugural Geoffrey Sawer Lecture, 1998 (L-R) D.Pearce, H.Charlesworth, M.Coper & Sir N.Stephen

Inaugural Geoffrey Sawer Lecture, 21 May 1998 (L-R) Lady Stephen, Sir N.Stephen, H. Charlesworth & N. Sawer

Women and Armed Conflict Workshop, 14-15 September 1998

CIPL Advisory Board meeting, 1998 (L-R) D.Greig, K.Jones, T.Blunn, H.Charlesworth, M.Kirby & M.Coper

CIPL Group Shot (L-R) M.Coper, C.Hutton, T.Sherman, J.Braid, H.Charlesworth, D.Cass, F.Wheeler, A.Stone, R.McCorquodale & G.Williams

1998

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ANZSIL Conference, 19-21 June 1998 (L-R) K.Keith, D.Rothwell, R.Rayfuse, B.Opeskin

Geoffrey Sawer Lecture, 1999 (L-R) E.Evatt, H.Charlesworth & N.Sawer

Public Law Discussion Group, 1999 (L-R) D.Richardson & P.O’Neil

Public Law Discussion Group Annual Dinner, 1999 (L-R) Hon D.Williams, P.O’Neil & G.Neate

International Law Discussion Group, 1999 (L-R) S.Smallacomb, D.Stewart, L. Behrendt & G.Marks

CIPL Board meeting, 1999 (L-R) M.Kirby, M.Coper, S.Kenny, J.Braithwaite, D.Greig, M.Edwards, M.Kupa and R.Creyke

ANZSIL Conference, 1999 (L-R) I.Shearer, D.Mason & K. Keith

1998—1999

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Geoffrey Sawer Lecture, 2000 (L-R) M.Coper, K.Sullivan & H.Charlesworth

Research Workshop, 2000 (L-R) P.Cane, M.Halligan & H.Charlesworth

Inaugural UN Lecture, 2000 (L-R) P.Wensley, D.Terrell and H.Charlesworth

2000

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The Dismissal Dinner, 2000 (L-R) G.Whitlam, J.Matthews & T.Blackshield

2000

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10th Anniversary Dinner, 2000 (L-R) J.Disney, H.Charlesworth & P.Alston

Staff and Members of CIPL, 2001

Terrorism, International Law & the US Response Forum with ANZSIL, Canberra, 2001(L-R) C.Reus-Smit, I.Shearer, D.Rothwell, T.McCormack, P.Mathew & A.Bergin

Geoffrey Sawer Lecture, 2001 (L-R) Sir G.Brennan, H.Charlesworth, N.Sawer & M.Coper

Public Law Weekend, 2001 (L-R) P.Bayne, H.Irving & T.Blackshield

2000—2001

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UN Lecture, 2005 (L-R) P.Mathew & J.DauthPublic Law Weekend, Launch of John Williams’ ‘The Australian Constitution: A Documentary History’, 2005 (L-R) M.Coper, H.Roberts, J.Williams & F.Wheeler

Governing & Representing Women Seminar, 2006

Geoffrey Sawer Lecture, 2006 (L-R) V.Jackson, M.Coper

CIPL-CIGJ lecture on ‘Women’s Status, Men’s Status’ 26 July 2007 - C.A Mackinnon

2005—2007

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CIPL afternoon tea, 2007 (Back L-R) M.Coper, F.Chard, G.Porretto, H.Nasu (Front L-R) E.Willheim, J.Braid, D.Stewart, K.Rubenstein, H.Bermingham & J.Lee

Solferino Seminar, 2007 (L-R) G.Porretto, K.Rubenstein, M.Karagiannakis & J.Lee

Geoffrey Sawer Lecture, 2007 (L-R) M.Taggart, K.Rubenstein & M.Coper

CIPL Seminar Senator Chris Evans, Minister for Immigration & Citizenship Announcing Reforms to Australia’s Immigration Detention System, 2008

2008 Inaugural Kirby Lecture on International Law (L-R) J.Crawford & M.Coper

ANZSIL Dinner, 2008 (L-R) M.Coper, K.Rubenstein, F.Moorhouse (Dinner Speaker) & C.Lumby

2007—2008

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CIPL Board, 2009 (Back L-R) M.Coper, Justice S.Kenny, Hon Justice M.Kirby, R.Cornall & D.Rothwell (Front L-R) R.Leon, K.Rubenstein & P.Richards

Global Health Symposium, 2009 (L-R) M.Rimmer, T.Pogge, K.Rubenstein, T.Faunce & L.Gostin

Kirby Lecture in International Law, 2009 (L-R) D.Rothwell, H.Charlesworth & The Hon M.Kirby

Sawer Lecture, 2009 (L-R) H.Corder, K.Rubenstein & M.Coper

Launch of ‘Sanctions, Accountability and Governance in a Globalised World’, 2009 (L-R) J.Farrall, P.Scott & K.Rubenstein

CIPL Seminar – Minister Peter Garrett announcing Australia’s Ambition for the World-wide conservation of Whales, 2010

2009—2010

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Directors (Past & PresentKim Rubenstein (2006–current)Robin Creyke (Interim Director Jan–Dec 2005) Andrew Byrnes (Interim Director Aug–Dec 2004)Hilary Charlesworth (1998–2004)Julian Disney (1996–1997)Philip Alston (1990–1995)

Deputy DirectorsJulian Disney (1991-1995)Don Greig (1996)Penelope Mathew (Interim Associate Director- International Law 2005)Fiona Wheeler (Interim Associate Director- Public Law 2005)

StaffEmilija BeswickGlen Brennan (Ms)Jennifer BraidChristine EvansMargot GambleJane GraceNaomi HansarCathy Hutton Tanya Mark Wendy Mohring Claire Parkhill

Kavitha RobinsonJacqueline SandersonGlenda WaddellRoslyn WalkerValerie WayteNola Whitecross

Centre Advisory Committee (1990–1996)Philip AlstonPat BrazilTom CampbellMeredith EdwardsPaul FinnDon GreigJohn McCarthyDennis PearceStephen SkehillPeter Wilenski

Other Advisory Committees (1990-1995)Jonathan AleckBen BoerHenry BurmesterChristine ChinkinDonna CraigLindsay CurtisJenny DegelingJudith GardamNeil GunninghamJan Linehan

Hilary MansonAnnette O’NeillRoland RichMichael SassellaMike SmithChristopher StakerRobert ToddMartin TsamenyiLorraine Weinman

1995 Review CommitteeDavid KinleyJohn Warhurst

Current Advisory Board MembersMichael Coper (Chair)The Hon. Justice Susan KennyWilliam Maley, AMPenny RichardsThe Hon Justice Richard RefshaugeChris Reus-SmitDon RothwellKim RubensteinElizabeth BroderickKathy LeighRoger Wilkins AO

People involved with CIPL1990–2010*

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Past Board Members (1996–2009)Philip AlstonTony BlunnJohn Brathwaite Pat BrazilTom CampbellHilary CharlesworthRobert CornallRobin CreykeJohn DauthJulian DisneyMeredith EdwardsPaul FinnPeter GreyDon GreigThe Hon Michael Kirby AC CMGKim JonesMiles KupaRenee Leon Chris MoraitisDennis PearceRichard RoweStephen SkehillPeter Wilenski

Academic Members/Faculty Members (present and former)Karl AldersonKent Anderson

Donald AntonPeter Bailey AM OBEPeter BarcroftHelen BerminghamTony BlackshieldKevin BorehamSimon BronittAndrew ByrnesPeter CaneDeborah Zipporah CassMoeen CheemaJennifer Clarke Tony ConnollyMichael Coper Robin CreykeDominique Dalla-PozzaAnnemarie DeverauxJulian DisneyMorag DonaldsonLynn Du MoulinThomas FaunceDaniel FitzpatrickJean-Pierre FonteyneAnthony ForsythDon GreigKath HallSarah HeathcoteIan Holloway Vivian HolmesBrad Jessup

Judith JonesAnn KentWendy Kukulies-SmithAnne MacDuffPenelope Mathew Robert McCorquodaleShae McCrystal Leighton McDonaldJohn McMillan Anne McNaughtonWayne MorganHitoshi NasuAnne OrfordDennis PearceMartin PhillipsonGabriele Porretto James PrestSimon Rice OAMMatthew RimmerHeather RobertsDonald R. RothwellJohn SeymourAmelia Simpson Gerry SimpsonJames StelliosDaniel StewartAdrienne Stone Johanna SutherlandMolly Townes O’BrienFiona Wheeler

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Ben WickhamJohn WilliamsGeorge WilliamsMatthew Zagor

Visiting Fellows (present & former)William Buss Mara BusteloHilary CharlesworthMadelaine ChiamAlex Conte Benoit DupontAnne GallagherFrance Houle James IngramSeigo IwamotoPeter JohnstonRick KreverTim McCormackPamela O’NeilHoward PenderCameron RiderIvan ShearerTom ShermanJulia Sloth NeilsonGraham OrrJulie SmithErnst WilheimGeorge WilliamsLeslie Zines

Research Fellows (former)Tim BonyhadyDeborah CassJudy HendersonFleur JustAnn KentMelissa PerryDeborah SenzMary Wood

Research Students (present & former)Amanda Alexander Abdulaziz Al WasilHafiz Aziz-Ur-RehmanJennifer BalintPrue BatesShannon CutherbertsonBina D’CostaDavid De SilvaAnnemarie DevereuxAndrew EndreyJo FordBernard FungLaura Grenfell Lee HollowayPaula KeatingLinda KirkSari KouvoJoanne LeeAnne MacDuff

Alison McLennan Claire MahonJulie MaronSuzette MitchellRebecca Monson Vanessa MunroLouise Parrott Zoe PearsonSiswo PramonoTanya PridankoffPeter PrinceAnthea RobertsAndrei SeetoGabrielle Simm Achmad Gusman Catur Siswandi Adérito SoaresFabio SpadiTania SteinmullerFelicity Tepper Helen Watchirs

ANU Associated Members (present & former)Hilary Charlesworth Susan Harris-RimmerJeremy FarrallKatie Young

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Summer Scholars (former)David Ablen Ingrid BarnsleyPatrick NorthDorothy PawlukowskiFrances Voon

Research Assistants (present & former)Lea ArmstrongJill CaldwellLinda BarrieJennifer BeardRuth BohillSyvi BoonKate BoothSophia CasonShannon CuthbertsonMichelle FosterBernard FungJane GarrettBridget Gilmour-WalshJasne GraceKathryn HaighMeredeth HoffmanBelinda HollowayFiona HyslopEsther JamesDaniel JoyceTeresa LawlerDai Lee

Nina LeijonNiamh Lenagh MaguireDara McDanielPhil McKieverMichael MathiesonBeth MorrisTrevor MosesYee Fui NgAlex OwenDorothy PawlukowskiGeorgia PriceHilary RaySonya SceatsDaniel StewartAlexandra StrangJane StrattonRachel TanCecelia TancredXuelin TeoAngela TheodoropoulosChristian TrenbethAndrew WilliamsMary WoodEmma Yarrow

Interns/LLB Research Projects (present & former)Sarah BishopMelanie CalvertJacqueline ChaplinJacqueline FieldNicola JacksonRebecca JenkinTeresa Lawler Niamh Lenagh-MaguireTrevor MosesKiri OliverAlexandra OwensAnhared PriceKrishna RajendhraChristine RatnasinghamJennifer RoweAndrew ThomasDiana ZelenyGabrielle Zimnoch

* This list has been compiled by reading through past reports and newsletters of CIPL. If you know of other people who should be on the list, please contact CIPL [email protected]. Thanks to CIPL intern Sarah Bishop for her assistance in compiling this list.

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Participants of the CIPL Twentieth Anniversary EventTuesday 18 May, College of Law Theatre

Adcock, FleurAlston, PhilipBath, VivienneBelford, AndrewBoreham, KevinBraid, JennyBriggs, RobertButhod-Garcon, AurelieByrnes, AndrewCampbell, TomCane, PeterChan, VincciCharlesworth, HilaryChoon, ShaunCowden, MhairiCreyke, RobinDalla-Pozza, DominiqueDisney, JulianDuff, NicholasDuong, PhuongEdwards, MeredithFarrell, JeremyFaunce, TomField, JulieFonteyne, Jean-Pierre (Dr)Foward, CherryFraser, RonGallagher, AnneGao, Ruimin

Greig, DonGuest, CharlesHarley, GeorgiaHarrison-Smith, MargaretHassan, MenelleHenry, AllisonHerrling, HeikeHo, JadeHutton, CathyJaireth, Hanna (Dr)Kendall, AntoniaKent, AnnKllugman, Kristine (Dr)Lake, KatherineLeigh, KathyLenagh-Maguire, NiamhLeonard, KerinLewin, AdeleMackay, EmilyMark, TanyaMarks, GregMathew, PeneMcCosker, Sarah (Dr)McRae, RowanMorss, JohnNeoh, JoshuaO’Neil, PamParrot, LouisePearce, Dennis

Ramsay, SteveRefshauge, RichardRehman, Hafiz Aziz urRobinson, KavithaRose, ElenaRothwell, DonRowe, RichardRowlings, BillRubenstein, KimSanderson, JacquelineShearing, NicoleSimon, KathrynSkillen, GeoffSpeckman, DecianaStellios, JamesTelec, AmeliaVeth, PeterViskovich, YanyaWallbridge, RachelWashington, CharlesWatchirs, HelenWheeler, FionaWillheim, ErnstWilliams, GeorgeYoung, KatharineZines, LeslieZagor, Matthew

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Centre for International and Public LawANU College of LawThe Australian National UniversityCanberra ACT 0200

T: + 61 2 6125 0454F: + 61 2 6125 0150E: [email protected]: http://law.anu.edu.au/CIPL