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Bond Law Review

@BondLawReview

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The Bond Law Review is a peer reviewed journal covering the whole spectrum of legal research. Edited by @rachaelfield68 and @vbaumfield.

Gold Coast, Queensland
Joined November 2016
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@BondJournals
Bond University Law Journals
3 years
Important #research published today in the @BondLawReview: 'Fully diagnosed, fully stabilised and fully treated’: succeeding in a claim for a Disability Support Pension in Australia with #endometriosis and chronic pelvic pain'. Read now, it's #OpenAccess!
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By Karena Viglianti. This article outlines what applicants, their legal representatives and their treating doctors can learn from the cases on applicants for a disability support pension with...
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@BondJournals
Bond University Law Journals
3 years
Now available in the @BondLawReview, #OpenAccess #law #research by Mark Giancaspro outlining shortcomings in the Stubbings v Jams judgment. A missed opportunity to clarify aspects of the 'doctrine of unconscionability' defined in Australian Consumer Law. https://t.co/p2TpnUX8LI
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By Mark Giancaspro. This article extrapolates what it can from Stubbings (HCA) and other leading cases to try and add clarity to the frequently litigated but poorly understood statutory unconsciona...
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@drjoncrowe
Jonathan Crowe
4 years
This important article by Dr Kylie Weston-Scheuber in the @BondLawReview, based on the inaugural Legal and Social Change Lecture last year at @BondUniversity, examines the secretisation of information by government in Australia.
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By Kylie Weston-Scheuber. In recent years, the Australian government has been criticised for secrecy in a number of areas, including border protection, foreign aid, freedom of information and more...
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@BondJournals
Bond University Law Journals
4 years
'It is important not to be blasé about the consequences of government secrecy on our society.' Latest from @BondLawReview, an article by Kylie Weston-Scheuber on the secretisation of information by government in Australia. Freely available #OpenAccess...
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By Kylie Weston-Scheuber. In recent years, the Australian government has been criticised for secrecy in a number of areas, including border protection, foreign aid, freedom of information and more...
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@BondLawReview
Bond Law Review
5 years
Out with the Old, in with the Alternative: A Critical Examination of How Lawyers Can Use Alternative Fee Arrangements to Satisfy Increasingly Powerful Clients
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By Joshua Yan. This article examines law firms’ need to replace the billable hour with alternative fee arrangements and discusses the ethical and managerial hurdles they will face when making this...
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@BondLawReview
Bond Law Review
6 years
Making Rights Real: The Promise and Potential Pitfalls of the Human Rights Act 2019 (Qld) by Scott McDougall, Queensland Human Rights Commissioner @QldHumanRights
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By Scott McDougall. The commencement of the Human Rights Act 2019 on 1 January 2020 heralds a new era in public sector decision-making in Queensland.
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@BondLawReview
Bond Law Review
6 years
The @BondLawReview accepts submissions on a rolling basis. We offer an efficient and author-friendly review process.
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The Bond Law Review is an open access refereed journal that publishes articles on the whole spectrum of legal topics and issues.
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@BondLawReview
Bond Law Review
6 years
The @BondLawReview accepts submissions on a rolling basis. We offer an efficient and author-friendly review process.
blr.scholasticahq.com
The Bond Law Review is an open access refereed journal that publishes articles on the whole spectrum of legal topics and issues.
0
2
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@BondLawReview
Bond Law Review
6 years
Treating Vulnerable Consumers ‘Fairly’ When They Make a Complaint About Banking or Finance in Australia by @TaniaSourdin and Mirella Atherton
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By Tania Sourdin, Mirella Atherton. Researchers, commentators and policy makers have proposed various definitions about what it means to be a ‘vulnerable consumer’.
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