How Canada Chose Exile: The decision to banish Japanese Canadians, 1946

Common Room, Level 4, Sydney Law School

How Canada Chose Exile: The decision to banish Japanese Canadians, 1946This event is proudly co-presented by the University of Sydney Law School and Discipline of History. In-person event As the end of the Second World War drew into view, federal officials in Canada faced a policy problem of their own creation. They had displaced over […]

How China governs Big Tech and regulates artificial intelligence

Common Room, Level 4, Sydney Law School

How China governs Big Tech and regulates artificial intelligence In-person event China has long been recognized as a powerhouse in cultivating Big Tech firms that rival those in the United States. However, the Chinese government recently embarked on a massive regulatory crackdown, targeting its largest tech corporations such as Alibaba, Tencent, and Meituan.  Many Western […]

Peace in the Ancient Near East: Insights into the world’s first attested peace treaty

Common Room, Level 4, Sydney Law School

Peace in the Ancient Near East: Insights into the world’s first attested peace treatyIn-person event This seminar gives some background to the first attested peace treaty in world history, between Ramses II of Egypt and Hattusili III of Hatti. This treaty survives in several copies, in two languages (Ancient Egyptian and Akkadian) and in two […]

Navigating China’s regulatory approach to generative artificial intelligence

Common Room, Level 4, Sydney Law School

Navigating China’s regulatory approach to generative artificial intelligenceIn-person event In-person event The rapid development and application of generative artificial intelligence (AI) systems have raised growing concerns of their potential risks at a global level. In July 2023, Chinese regulators passed the Interim Measures for the Management of Generative AI Services (the Measures). The Measures target […]

JSI Seminar: On Constitutional Review

Common Room, Level 4, Sydney Law School

JSI Seminar: On Constitutional ReviewIn-person event Constitutional review is a continental European instrument of checking the parliamentary legislation for its compliance with the constitution. This practice has a long history traced from ancient Greek democracy to the French and American Revolutions up to the 20th century culminating in Constitutional Courts. The Czechoslovakian experience of its […]

JSI Seminar: A republican case for regulatory juries

Common Room, Level 4, Sydney Law School

JSI Seminar: A republican case for regulatory juriesIn-person event The idea of administrative juries was proposed by David Arkush in 2013, drawing on the republican revival in public-law theory. These proposed juries would make some key policy choices especially underlying delegated lawmaking in the US. The paper challenges some criticisms that have been made of […]

JSI Workshop: Positive Pluralism and its Limits

Board Room, Level 4

JSI Workshop: Positive Pluralism and its LimitsIn-person event This project asks how freedom of religion should be construed when applied to religious insular communities whose way of life is often at odds with Western assumptions of a good life. I will argue for protection of distinctive religious communal identities as entities in and of themselves […]

JSI Seminar: Social Rights and Proportionality

Common Room, Level 4, Sydney Law School

JSI Seminar: Social Rights and ProportionalityIn-person event This seminar outlines a model of proportionality analysis for the adjudication of positive constitutional economic and social rights . Three distinctions are the basis of this model: (i) the distinction between empirical and normative aspects of the adjudication of social rights; (ii) between the level and mode of […]

Workshop: The Future of the Criminal Law

Law Lounge, Level 1

Workshop: The Future of the Criminal LawIn-person event In the current moment, it is little exaggeration to say the criminal law, and criminal justice more broadly, is in crisis. In liberal legal systems such as that of NSW and other Australian jurisdictions, the idea of a minimalist criminal law (which maximises liberty for individuals) remains […]

Re-imagining the laws of nature – storying the rules of hyperconnected futures

Re-imagining the laws of nature – storying rules of hyperconnected futuresOnline event In this seminar, Dr Michelle Lim, Sydney Law School’s George Flannery Fellow, argues that rewriting legal systems to include more-than-human perspectives and employing creative writing in legal scholarship can help address global biodiversity loss, reimagine law, and foster hopeful, normalised human-nature relationships. Each […]

Book launch: Judicial Dysfunction in Indonesia

Common Room, Level 4, Sydney Law School

Book launch: Judicial Dysfunction in Indonesia An analysis of corruption in Indonesia’s courts. In-person event The University of Sydney Law School is delighted to invite you to the launch of Judicial Dysfunction in Indonesia by Professor Simon Butt, a revealing book that examines the deep-rooted issues in Indonesia’s judicial system. Tracing problems back to the […]