• Symposium: Financial crime in different contexts

    Sydney Law School, Law Lounge, Level 1, New Law Building Annex (F10A)

    In-person event Financial crime poses many challenges and affects a multitude of sectors, in Australia and globally. As offenders become more sophisticated, new vulnerabilities emerge, and law enforcement has to adapt. While the criminal justice responses have been swift and emphatic in some sectors, they have been cumbersome and lethargic in others. Variations in criminalisation […]

    Free, however registration is required.
  • UNCITRAL RCAP Symposium: Navigating transparency and confidentiality in international arbitration

    Online event

    PLEASE NOTE: This event is being held online only. UNCITRAL RCAP Symposium: Navigating transparency and confidentiality in international arbitration The UNCITRAL RCAP Symposium on ‘Transparency in Arbitration’ brings together distinguished experts to explore the critical balance between confidentiality and transparency in international arbitration, particularly in the Asia-Pacific region. Featuring insights from world-renowned scholars such as […]

    Free, however registration is required.
  • Documenting war crimes from the field

    Common Room, Level 4, New Law Building (F10), Eastern Avenue, Camperdown campus New Law Building, Camperdown, Australia

    In-person event In this seminar, Belkis Wille (Associate Director in the Crisis, Conflict and Arms Division at Human Rights Watch) will discuss her extraordinary experiences in documenting war crimes across the world. Over the course of her career, she has been documenting laws of war violations in Libya, Yemen, Iraq, Sudan, Israel and Palestine. Belkis […]

    Free, however registration is required.
  • The changing landscape of EU competition law – Competition law as an instrument of protectionist policy

    Common Room, Level 4, Sydney Law School

    This seminar will discuss recent developments in European competition law. Speakers Speaker: Professor Dubravka Akšamović, Faculty of Law Osijek, Croatia Commentator: Prof. Yane Svetiev, Sydney Law School Chair: Prof Jason Harris, Sydney Law School Wednesday 13 November, 2024 Time: 6.30-7.30pm Venue: Sydney Law School, Common Room, Level 4, New Law Building (F10), Camperdown Campus CPD points = 1 Register […]

  • Regulating disruptive technologies

    Common Room, Level 4, New Law Building (F10), Eastern Avenue, Camperdown campus New Law Building, Camperdown, Australia

    In-person event This presentation on disruptive technologies regulation, including artificial intelligence, will provide an overview of the various regulatory options available, their pros and cons, as well as possible outcomes in terms of technological advancement and social progress. Part of the lecture will present the author’s own three-level categorization of AI interference in human decision-making, […]

  • Sydney Law School Social Justice celebration

    Common Room, Level 4, New Law Building (F10), Eastern Avenue, Camperdown campus New Law Building, Camperdown, Australia

    Join us to celebrate many of the social achievements from the year, showcasing the work of students, practitioners-in-residence, and staff.

    Free, however registration is required.
  • New directions in financial crime

    Law Foyer, Level 2, New Law Building (F10), University of Sydney, Camperdown Campus

    Financial crime is a global issue that has a significant impact on Australia’s society and economy. Related offences come in different forms (e.g. bribery, corruption, fraud, money laundering) and are committed by different actors, with various motivations. The different sectors involved range from small businesses to large banks and from the real estate to the […]

  • Does compliance with the global anticorruption regime require the use of artificial intelligence?: The case of managing global critical raw material value chains

    The University of Sydney Law School, Boardroom, Level 4, New Law Building F10

    Hybrid event Business firms constantly hear that artificial intelligence has changed the world and that they must either utilize artificial intelligence or fall behind. By extension, this would be true of regulatory compliance as well as operations. This article challenges the mantra of artificial intelligence as a ubiquitous agent of change. It does so through […]

  • The next chapter of IBC: Innovations and expectations for India’s insolvency framework

    New Law Building (F10)

    In-person event This seminar will discuss developments in India’s Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code 2016 over the past year, including creditor recoveries of over $40 billion and major real estate resolutions that have safeguarded homebuyer interests and facilitated the completion of stalled projects, supported by innovative frameworks like the ‘Reverse CIRP’. The seminar will also discuss […]

  • 2025 George Winterton Memorial Lecture: The evolving electoral system as an ongoing constitutional process

    Banco Court, Supreme Court of NSW (184 Phillip Street, Sydney) 184 Phillip Street, Sydney, NSW, Australia

    Speaker: The Honourable Stephen John Gageler AC, Chief Justice of Australia About the lecture The form of popular sovereignty empowered by the Australian Constitution was framed to be government by “the people” in constitutive and routine manifestations, both sustaining and sustained by the system of government it called into existence. It was framed to be […]

  • White boxing the administrative state: Machine learning algorithms and the duty to give reasons in administrative law

    Common Room, Level 4, New Law Building (F10), Eastern Avenue, Camperdown campus New Law Building, Camperdown, Australia

    In-person event This presentation uses contemporary examples of automated systems operating in the UK and Australia to examine the duty to give reasons and the extent to which automated systems currently in use in the administrative state give effect to the duty. The discussion seeks to answer three questions: what are the purposes of the […]

  • 2025 Sydney Centre for International Law “Year in Review”

    Common Room, Level 4, New Law Building (F10), Eastern Avenue, Camperdown campus New Law Building, Camperdown, Australia

    The Sydney Centre for International Law at Sydney Law School is delighted to present the tenth International Law Year in Review Conference, to be held at the Law School on Friday 28 February 2025. This annual ‘year in review’ conference gives participants insight into the latest developments in international law over the preceding year, including […]