Output list
Journal article
Published 2025
International journal of law, policy, and the family, 39, 1, ebaf041
This article considers whether the Family Law Amendment Act 2024 is likely to achieve the Australian government’s stated reform goals. These goals include: codifying the common law so as to make property law clearer and thus more accessible for unrepresented litigants and those bargaining outside of the court; ensuring family violence is factored into all aspects of family law financial disputes; and placing more emphasis on children’s post-separation housing needs. The article provides an examination of the key changes to the Family Law Act 1975 that relate to property disputes between separated couples (married and cohabiting) against the backdrop of the existing case law. The article concludes that, while there are some positive aspects to the reforms (not least in the area of family violence), overall clarity has not been achieved. It is argued there is now uncertainty as to how various provisions will operate and the extent to which common law principles have been codified and it is difficult to see how this will improve access to justice for the target groups.
Book chapter
The Use of Family Law Assessments as a Vehicle for Skills Development
Published 2024
Teaching Family Law: Reflections on Pedagogy and Practice, 41 - 56
This chapter suggests that the teaching of family law, and in particular the use of detailed real-life assessments, provides a good vehicle for developing advanced legal problem-solving skills in law students. Further, family law assessments can present the opportunity for invested personal experiences for students which can foster both retention of core doctrinal principles and calling attention to some of the fundamental tensions at play in family law and thus deepening student engagement with the topic.
Journal article
Published 2020
Critical Social Policy, 40, 4, 627 - 648
Welfare agencies are increasingly turning to technology to facilitate information-sharing and communication with users. However, while the administrative, governmental and material effects of technological advances have been examined, research has yet to explore how welfare users could make use of technology for their benefit. In this article, we examine the extent to which available technologies allow Australian separated mothers to assemble and provide data to government agencies in order to pursue procedural, and therefore substantive, justice in child support and welfare contexts. We find that no currently available apps provide separated mothers with technological affordances suited to this purpose. As a result, we find that existing child support and welfare data practices reinforce the social hierarchies that exist post-separation, whereby low-income single mothers are financially and socially disadvantaged, while welfare administrators and non-compliant ex-partners accrue savings and discretionary benefits as a result of existing bureaucratic data gaps and omissions.
Journal article
Exposure to the antimicrobial peptide LL-37 produces dendritic cells optimized for immunotherapy
Published 2019
OncoImmunology, 8, 8
Immunization of patients with autologous, ex vivo matured dendritic cell (DC) preparations, in order to prime antitumor T-cell responses, is the focus of intense research. Despite progress and approval of clinical approaches, significant enhancement of these personalized immunotherapies is urgently needed to improve efficacy. We show that immunotherapeutic murine and human DC, generated in the presence of the antimicrobial host defense peptide LL-37, have dramatically enhanced expansion and differentiation of cells with key features of the critical CD103 + /CD141 + DC subsets, including enhanced cross-presentation and co-stimulatory capacity, and upregulation of CCR7 with improved migratory capacity. These LL-37-DC enhanced proliferation, activation and cytokine production by CD8 + (but not CD4 + ) T cells in vitro and in vivo. Critically, tumor antigen-presenting LL-37-DC increased migration of primed, activated CD8 + T cells into established squamous cell carcinomas in mice, and resulted in tumor regression. This advance therefore has the potential to dramatically enhance DC immunotherapy protocols.
Journal article
Published 2019
UNSW Law Journal, 42, 4, 1362 - 1385
Australia lags behind other jurisdictions in considering the relevance of a mature minor’s decision-making capacity to parenting disputes. Gillick competency, as it is known, is routinely discussed in the case of medical decision-making, however is ignored when it comes to parenting decisions concerning very mature minors. This article explores this failure and in particular considers a) the jurisdiction of the court to determine a matter when a child is competent; b) the extent to which the courts are entitled to ignore a child’s competency, based on their best interests; c) to the extent a court should, but does not, consider a child’s competency, why they do not; and d) the arguments for overriding, or not, competency where there is a discretion. The article concludes that the court needs to reconsider this area of law, highlighting that this would play a part in the larger project of giving due recognition to children’s rights in parenting proceedings.
Journal article
Published 2018
Australian Journal of Family Law, 32, 1, 162 - 188
As family law in Australia is under consideration by the Australian Law Reform Commission, it is an opportune time to consider whether the family property regime is in need of reform, in particular to provide more certainty. This article explores, and details, the courts’ power to circumscribe the exercise of discretion in this area by making legitimate guidelines and binding rules. The article argues that insufficient attention has historically been paid to this power, resulting in a lack of clarity as to the status of statements of legal principle. The article concludes that this, alone, does not justify wholesale property law reform. It supports targeted, limited, legislative reform and greater focus by the judiciary on the classification of statements of principle.
Journal article
Domestic Violence, Property and Family Law in Australia
Published 2018
International Journal of Law, Policy and the Family, 32, 2, 204 - 229
In Australia, domestic violence has increasingly been recognized as germane to ancillary proceedings, including parenting and property matters. However, the road to recognition of the relevance of violence has been slow and the search for appropriate responses challenging. Drawing upon an explicitly feminist perspective, this article outlines the why and how of that relevance by looking at the ways in which family violence may intersect with family law property matters. We explain how a property settlement, both in process and outcome, may be either a manifestation of coercive control and/or affected by the legacy of coercive control. In terms of how this has been addressed to date, we chart the limited Australian responses and suggestions for reform, which have effectively left the judiciary to fashion a response with all the attendant difficulties of non-legislative reform. In conclusion, we maintain that the time is therefore ripe for a reconsideration of legislative – and other – responses to issues of family violence and property.
Conference paper
Changes in Traditional Parenthood, Adults and Children in Post-modern societies
Published 2017
International Family Law Conference, 06/07/2017–07/07/2017, Brussels, Belgium
No abstract available
Conference presentation
Published 2017
Anglo-Australian Financial Remedies Workshop, 11/09/2017–12/09/2017, Cambridge University
Invited Speaker
Conference paper
Children as participants in parenting disputes: Engaging with the debate on welfare v autonomy
Published 2017
7th World Congress on Family Law and Children’s Rights, 04/06/2017–07/06/2017, Dublin, Ireland
No abstract available