Brian Fitzgerald (academic)

Brian Fitzgerald

Brian Fitzgerald at the ARC Graeme Clark Research Outcomes Forum at Parliament House in Canberra June 2008
Residence Brisbane, Australia
Nationality Australian
Education Queensland University of Technology, Oxford University, Harvard University, Griffith University
Occupation Academic and Barrister
Employer Australian Catholic University
Relatives Sister, Professor Anne Fitzgerald

Brian Fitzgerald is an Academic and Barrister of the High Court of Australia. He is an Intellectual Property and Information Technology/Internet lawyer who has pioneered the teaching of Internet/Cyber Law in Australia. Fitzgerald was a specialist Research Professor at the Queensland University of Technology (QUT) until February 2012, when he took up the position of Executive Dean of the Australian Catholic University's new Faculty of Law.

Education and career

Professor Brian Fitzgerald's first degree was a BA from Griffith University. He studied law at QUT, graduating as University Medallist in Law, and holds postgraduate degrees in law from Oxford University, Harvard University, and Griffith University. In 1998 he was QUT Law Faculty's Alumnus of the Year.

From 1998-2002, Fitzgerald was Head of the School of Law and Justice at Southern Cross University in New South Wales, Australia and from 2002–2007 he was Head of the School of Law at QUT in Brisbane. Since March 2012 he has been the Executive Dean at the Australian Catholic University's new Faculty of Law, based in Melbourne, Australia.

Fitzgerald is a Chief Investigator and Program Leader for Law in the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence on Creative Industries and Innovation. He is also the Project Leader of Creative Commons Australia and Peer to Patent Australia and is member of the Access to and Use of Public sector Information (auPSI) project. He was Project Leader for the Open Access to Knowledge Law (OAK Law) Project[1] studying legal protocols for open access for the Australian research sector, and for the Legal Framework for e-Research Project.[2]

His current projects include work on intellectual property issues across the areas of Copyright, Digital Content and the Internet, Copyright and the Creative Industries in China, Open Content licensing and the Creative Commons, Free and Open Source Software, research Use of Patents, Patent Informatics Administration Licensing, Science Commons, e-Research, Licensing of Digital Entertainment and Anti-Circumvention Law.

Professor Fitzgerald was a member of the Government 2.0 Taskforce set up by the Australian Government in 2009. The Government 2.0 Taskforce produced its report "Engage: Getting on with Government 2.0" in December 2009.

Brian Fitzgerald was featured in The Sydney Morning Herald,[3] The Science Show,[4] and The Law Report[5] discussing copyright related legal issues.

Books

See also

Footnotes

  1. Legal Strategies for Streamlining Collaboration in an e-Research World
  2. Bushell-Embling, Dylan (2007-09-25). "Private Eyes on Public Data". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 2008-09-24.
  3. Williams, Robyn (2007-12-01). "Alfred Deakin Innovation Lecture". ABC Radio National. Retrieved 2008-09-24.
  4. Carrick, Damien (2002-08-06). "The World of Pirates, Playstations and Mod-Chips". ABC Radio National. Retrieved 2008-09-24.

External links

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