Doing lawyering differently and in a non-adversarial way to better respond to community

This seminar and conversation will explore recent public inquiries in Australia and Dr Liz Curran’s research over the past six years suggesting a less adversarial approach may be necessary. These inquiries have considered:

  • The impact on different cultures of colonial and adversarial practices (Australia, Canada etc);
  • The effect of the adversarial approach in family violence and family law where children involved;
  • Institutional abuse by churches and similar organisations and by defence forces;
  • The effect of poverty and an unequal bargaining position – where for example, industry groups with immense resources routinely exploit this advantage to wear those without resources down i.e. ‘repeat players’ in human rights and equal opportunity and employment law cases to disempower complainants, cost of litigation;
  • Barriers to access to justice – navigability, confidence, capacity and engagement issues.

There is a great deal of international research on this as well, some of which would be flagged.

Then there will be a conversation with participants about their views, experiences and ways forward.

Dr Liz Curran is Associate Professor, in the School of Legal Practice ANU College of Law a Senior Fellow, Higher Education Academy and current Associate Director of the ANU International Centre for the Profession, Education & Regulation in Law (Melbourne based).

Please register for the event via the link here.

This event is presented by the ANU School of Legal Practice & Centre of the Profession, Education and Regulation in Law.

Date & time

Thu 07 Feb 2019, 12–2pm

Location

Phillipa Weeks Library, ANU College of Law, 5 Fellows Road, ANU

Speakers

Dr Liz Curran

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Updated:  19 February 2019/Responsible Officer:  Convenor, Gender Institute/Page Contact:  Gender Institute