The article considers the institutions of literature, law, politics, and economics are all forms of representation forming a sociocutlural network, and examines the law and literature about Aboriginal/white relations and their part in the Wik legal debate
Lewis Carroll\u27s 1865 scene of a recalcitrant Alice in the courtroom, defying the court\u27s aut...
Recent Supreme Court decisions such as Atkins v. Virginia and Lawrence v. Texas specifically addres...
My article tries to answer the question whether in criminal cases existing courts should be able to ...
In Australia, law’s imaginary is part of our colonial legacy. Law’s narratives and figures, as well ...
Drawing on Alexis Wright’s novel The Swan Book and Irene Watson’s expansive critique of Australian l...
In this article I embark upon an investigation of the politico-aesthetics of a trajectory of Austral...
© 2015 by The Cardozo School of Law of Yeshiva University. All rights reserved. This article focuses...
ABSTRACT: This thesis is submitted as total fulfilment of the requirements of the PhD in Creative Wr...
The article explores questions about Nick Enright's various dramatisations of the murder of Leigh Le...
Indigenous right insistently challenges the surpassing arrogations of sovereign right. In so doing, ...
Article examines theories of three important legal and political theorists working in the time of tr...
In lieu of abstract, here is the first paragraph of the article: Oodgeroo of the Tribe of Noonuccal,...
In this paper I argue that Alexis Wright's novel The Swan Book (2013) establishes a hermeneutics of ...
Current high levels of morbidity and mortality, and high rates of incarceration among Australian Abo...
Using the philosophical position of phenomenology this article examines the ways in which ideas of w...
Lewis Carroll\u27s 1865 scene of a recalcitrant Alice in the courtroom, defying the court\u27s aut...
Recent Supreme Court decisions such as Atkins v. Virginia and Lawrence v. Texas specifically addres...
My article tries to answer the question whether in criminal cases existing courts should be able to ...
In Australia, law’s imaginary is part of our colonial legacy. Law’s narratives and figures, as well ...
Drawing on Alexis Wright’s novel The Swan Book and Irene Watson’s expansive critique of Australian l...
In this article I embark upon an investigation of the politico-aesthetics of a trajectory of Austral...
© 2015 by The Cardozo School of Law of Yeshiva University. All rights reserved. This article focuses...
ABSTRACT: This thesis is submitted as total fulfilment of the requirements of the PhD in Creative Wr...
The article explores questions about Nick Enright's various dramatisations of the murder of Leigh Le...
Indigenous right insistently challenges the surpassing arrogations of sovereign right. In so doing, ...
Article examines theories of three important legal and political theorists working in the time of tr...
In lieu of abstract, here is the first paragraph of the article: Oodgeroo of the Tribe of Noonuccal,...
In this paper I argue that Alexis Wright's novel The Swan Book (2013) establishes a hermeneutics of ...
Current high levels of morbidity and mortality, and high rates of incarceration among Australian Abo...
Using the philosophical position of phenomenology this article examines the ways in which ideas of w...
Lewis Carroll\u27s 1865 scene of a recalcitrant Alice in the courtroom, defying the court\u27s aut...
Recent Supreme Court decisions such as Atkins v. Virginia and Lawrence v. Texas specifically addres...
My article tries to answer the question whether in criminal cases existing courts should be able to ...