- Melbourne Law School - Research Publications
Melbourne Law School - Research Publications
Permanent URI for this collection
Search Results
Now showing
1 - 10 of 44
-
ItemDRUGS PROSECUTIONS IN VIETNAM: THE MODERN PROPAGANDA TRIALNicholson, P ; Kieu, T (MONASH UNIV, FAC LAW, 2008)
-
Item
-
ItemAustralian family law: The contemporary contextFEHLBERG, B ; Behrens, J (Oxford University Press, 2008)
-
ItemThe field of crime control and social order: Prospects for criminal procedure reform in ChinaBiddulph, S ; Nicholson, P ; Biddulph, S (Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, 2008-08-22)
-
ItemThe scope of the supremacy clause of the United Nations CharterLiivoja, R (Cambridge University Press (CUP), 2008-10-22)Abstract Article 103 of the United Nations (UN) Charter stipulates that the obligations of UN Member States under the Charter prevail, in the event of a conflict, over their obligations under any other international agreement. While this important provision is often mentioned, its precise meaning remains something of a mystery. The present article tries to shed some light on the scope of this ‘supremacy clause’ by discussing, first, its operation with respect to treaties, and then by looking at its relevance to various other contractual arrangements and to customary international law.
-
ItemDirectors' Liability for Unpaid Employee Entitlements: Suggestions for Reform Based on their Liabilities for Unremitted TaxesAnderson, H (SYDNEY LAW SCH, 2008-09)
-
ItemPublic international law and the regulation of private spaces: Does the convention on the rights of the child impose an obligation on states to allow gay and lesbian couples to adopt?Tobin, J ; McNair, R (Oxford University Press (OUP), 2008-04-01)
-
ItemLESSONS (TO BE) LEARNT FROM THE OPES PRIME INSOLVENCYSteele, S (MELBOURNE UNIV LAW REVIEW ASSOC, 2008)
-
ItemConstitutional reform in Indonesia: Muddling towards democracyLINDSEY, T ; Lindsey, T (Federation Press, 2008)
-
ItemPerformance in Law School: What Matters in the Beginning?Larcombe, W ; Nicholson, P ; Malkin, I (Bond University, 2008)This article reports on research at the University of Newcastle, Australia, in 2006, which sought to identify the major causes of stress and dissatisfaction among lawyers and to correlate that information with measures of lawyers’ mental wellbeing (neuroticism), emotional intelligence, and the type of legal education and practical legal training (PLT) they had received. Part II reviews the relevant literature, Part III outlines the methodology, Part IV the findings, and Part V the recommendations.