Latest Perspectives

Law Journal Articles

Reading Time: 2 minutesACADEMIC WRITINGS LAW JOURNAL ARTICLES Court TV: Coming to an Internet Browser Near You (Update, Developments and Current Issues)’ (2006) 15 (4) Journal of Judicial Administration 218. (ISSN 1036-7918)       Court TV ‘Cultural...

Published as Conference Papers

Reading Time: 3 minutesACADEMIC WRITINGS PUBLISHED AS CONFERENCE PAPERS Interpreting in Tribunal Hearings Involving the Mentally ill, Intellectually Disabled and Cognitively Impaired Parties’ presented at the 2012 Biennial Conference of the Australian Institute of Interpreters and Translators,...

Other Publications

Reading Time: 2 minutesACADEMIC WRITINGS OTHER PUBLICATIONS ‘Religion and Education: Tertiary Level Religion’, Directions in Education, 2000.            Religion and Education ‘Law and Religion’, a chapter in a University of Western Australia booklet,...

Book Chapters

Reading Time: 2 minutesACADEMIC WRITINGS BOOK CHAPTERS   ‘Cameras in Court: Reluctant Admission to Proactive Collaboration’ in Patrick Keyzer, Jane Johnston and Mark Pearson (eds) The Courts and the Media: Challenges in the Era of Digital and...

List of Academic Writings

Reading Time: 7 minutesBOOKS Daniel Stepniak, Audio-Visual Coverage of Courts: A Comparative Analysis  Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2008, (ISBN: 9780521875271) First chapter, Index of contents etc PUBLISHED REPORTS Electronic Media Coverage of Courts: A Report Prepared for...

‘No will leave us nowhere. No recognition. No way forward’ says the PM – I beg to differ.

Reading Time: < 1 minuteA No vote victory on the Voice to Parliament proposal would not leave Indigenous affairs ‘nowhere’. Contrary to what the Yes camp wants us to believe, making the Voice permanent would not necessarily be a step forward. While governments have repeatedly appointed and Indigenous advisory bodies that governments appointed and abolished, the wording of the proposed constitutional amendment would allow Parliament to alter at will literally everything about the Voice apart from its existence.

The Dark Side of the Moon Redux – Roger Waters Reimagines the Original

Reading Time: 2 minutesWaters demonstrates creative genius in producing an album that is readily identifiable as Dark Side of the Moon, yet sufficiently different to not be regarded as merely a version of the original. On Dark Side of the Moon Redux Waters showcases his musical mastery, in a manner befitting a writer and musician who is 50 years older and performing for an audience that is not asked to compare or look up the original.

Referendum 2023 – Indigenous Voice to Parliament and Government

Reading Time: 7 minutesThe looming 2023 referendum asks us to answer a single question about two distinct issues – the constitutional recognition of Australia’s Indigenous peoples as our nation’s First Peoples, and the constitutionally entrenched setting up of a Voice to Parliament (and Government).
By presenting the Voice as a means of recognising Indigenous people as our First Peoples, the referendum risks creating the impression that the majority of Australians reject the constitutional recognition of the status of our Indigenous peoples. At best, a narrowly victorious Yes vote would create the impression that we are divided on the issue of recognition. Such an outcome would also constitutionally entrench the perception that Indigenous people are disadvantaged and unlike other Australians experiencing similar disadvantage, will require specific and ongoing governmental assistance as recommended by a body called, the Voice to Parliament.