Melbourne Law School
Melbourne Law School | |
---|---|
Established | 1857 |
School type | Public |
Parent endowment | $1.335 billion |
Dean | Professor Carolyn Evans |
Location | Carlton, Victoria, Australia |
Enrollment | 1200 |
Faculty | 200 |
Website | www.law.unimelb.edu.au |
Melbourne Law School (MLS or Melbourne Law) is one of the professional graduate schools of the University of Melbourne.[1] Located in Carlton, Victoria, MLS is Australia's oldest law school to begin teaching operations,[2][3] and offers J.D., LL.M, Ph.D, and LL.D degrees. MLS is the only Australian member of the Law School Admission Council; and, in 2014, it was ranked as the best law school in Australia and eighth best in the world by QS World University Rankings.[4] In 2013, it was ranked the fifth best law school in the world.
MLS has produced a large number of luminaries in law and politics, including four Prime Ministers of Australia, three Governors-General, four Chief Justices of Australia and thirteen Commonwealth Attorneys-General. Alumni include one current Justice of the High Court of Australia, the current Chief Justice of the Family Court of Australia, the current Governor of Victoria, the current Solicitor-General of Victoria, the current President of the Australian Human Rights Commission, the current Victorian Equal Opportunity and Human Rights Commissioner and the current Chairman of the Victorian Bar Council.
History
MLS was established in 1857, when Richard Clarke Sewell was appointed Reader in Law. This was in response to demand for legal education from those seeking admission to practise as lawyers and the university's need to increase student numbers. The first students studied for a certificate that, with practical training, qualified them for admission to legal practice. In 1860 they were given the additional option of studying for a degree.[5]
MLS was expanded and reorganised in 1873, becoming the Faculty of Law.[6][7] The school continued to grow throughout the 19th and 20th centuries, and underwent a major transformation with the appointment of Sir Zelman Cowen as Dean in 1951. Sir Zelman shaped MLS after the United States model, rather than the British model that is common in Australia. Sir Zelman reformed teaching, research and academic recruitment. Under his stewardship, full-time academics came to dominate teaching, instead of part-time practitioners. Many prominent international academics were invited to study at the School, and many Australians were given the opportunity to study abroad.[8][9]
In 2007 MLS accepted its last cohort of LLB students. From 2008 the only degree offered by MLS qualifying for legal practice is the graduate-entry JD. This change to an entirely graduate law school is consistent with University-wide changes occurring under Vice-Chancellor Glyn Davis's Melbourne Model, although MLS does offer some subjects to the University's undergraduate students (known as 'breadth' subjects).
Admissions
MLS enrols approximately 360 students each year in the J.D. program. Applications are assessed on two criteria: academic results in all previous tertiary study and LSAT score.[10]
Academics
Research centres
MLS is host to a number of research centres and institutes, specialising in a wide variety of legal fields:
- Asian Law Centre
- Asia-Pacific Centre for Military Law
- Centre for Comparative Constitutional Studies
- Centre for Corporate Law and Securities Regulation
- Centre for Employment and Labour Relations Law
- Centre for Indonesian Law, Islam and Society
- Centre for Media and Communications Law
- Centre for Resources, Energy and Environmental Law
- Civil Justice Research Group
- Competition Law and Economics Network
- Electoral Regulation Research Network
- Global Economic Law Network
- Institute for International Law and Humanities
- Intellectual Property Research Institute of Australia
- Obligations Group
- The Tax Group
Mooting
Mooting is mandated as assessment at MLS for some core J.D. subjects, such as constitutional law,[11] and is widely pursued by the student body in both internal and external moot court competitions. MLS's internal moot court competition takes place in MLS's purpose-built moot court.[12] It is organised and run each year by the Melbourne University Law Students' Society, and is currently sponsored by King & Wood Mallesons.[13] MLS students have achieved success in multiple international moot court competitions. Teams from MLS have won the Philip C. Jessup International Law Moot Court Competition and the ELSA Moot Court Competition three times, and in 2012 a team from MLS won the IASLA Space Law Moot Court Competition.[14][15] A MLS team also won the inaugural Victorian Championship Moot in 2013.[16]
External programs
MLS offers subjects taught in New York City, Washington, D.C. and Geneva, and has partner programs with many of the world's leading law schools, including University of Virginia School of Law, Georgetown University Law Center, University of Toronto Faculty of Law, and the National University of Singapore Faculty of Law.[17][18] MLS is a founding member of the Center for Transnational Legal Studies in London, and contributes both staff and students to the Center every year. Additionally, MLS has dual degree arrangements with the University of Oxford, the University of Cambridge, New York University School of Law and the Chinese University of Hong Kong Faculty of Law.[19]
Publications
MLS students are involved in preparing and publishing the Melbourne University Law Review and the Melbourne Journal of International Law. These two journals jointly publish the Australian Guide to Legal Citation, the most widely followed authority for legal citation formats in Australia.[20] MLS students also produce a newspaper, De Minimis, and a magazine, "Purely Dicta".
Additional journals published by MLS include:
- The Australian Journal of Asian Law (in conjunction with the Australian National University and the University of Washington)
- The Australian Journal of Labour Law
- Media and Arts Law Review
Student organisations
Two main student organisations are associated with MLS. The first is the Melbourne University Law Students' Society, which represents all law students at the University of Melbourne. The second is the Global Law Students Association, which focuses on international legal issues, careers and provides additional support for international students at MLS.
In addition, the Postgraduate Law Student Association provides support to LL.M students. The Melbourne Chinese Law Society is also based at MLS, and facilitates the comparative study of Chinese and Australian law, as well as providing Mandarin language training to MLS students.
Deans
Below is a list of the deans of MLS from 1873 to the present:
- 1873–1888 William Hearn
- 1889–1892 Edward Jenks
- 1893–1927 William Harrison Moore
- 1928–1936 Kenneth Bailey
- 1937–1937 George Paton
- 1938–1942 Kenneth Bailey
- 1943–1951 George Paton
- 1951–1963 Zelman Cowen
- 1964–1964 Harold Ford
- 1964–1966 Zelman Cowen
- 1967–1973 Harold Ford
- 1973–1977 Sandford Clark[21]
- 1978–1983 Colin Howard [22]
- 1984–1986 Mark Weinberg[23]
- 1986–1988 Harold Luntz
- 1989–2002 Michael Crommelin[24]
- 2002–2003 Ian Ramsay
- 2003–2007 Michael Crommelin
- 2008–2009 James Hathaway
- 2010–2011 Michael Crommelin
- 2011–present Carolyn Evans[25]
Faculty
Notable academics at MLS include:
- Caron Beaton-Wells, competition law scholar
- Michael Bryan, equity and restitution scholar (emeritus professor)
- Andrew Christie, intellectual property scholar
- Manfred Ellinghaus, contract law scholar
- Tim Lindsey, Asian law scholar and public commentator
- Harold Luntz, tort law and damages scholar (emeritus professor)
- Tim McCormack, international humanitarian law scholar and Special Advisor on International humanitarian law to the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court
- Ian Ramsay, corporate law and corporate governance scholar and public commentator
- Cheryl Saunders, constitutional and administrative law scholar
Notable alumni
Main article: Melbourne Law School Alumni.
Alfred Deakin, the 2nd Prime Minister of Australia, Sir Robert Menzies, the 12th Prime Minister of Australia, Harold Holt, the 17th Prime Minister of Australia, and Julia Gillard, the 27th Prime Minister of Australia, all graduated from MLS. Three Governors-General and at least 13 Attorneys-General have also graduated from MLS, including Gareth Evans, Nicola Roxon and Mark Dreyfus.
Foreign politicians who attended MLS include Neri Javier Colmenares, a Member of the House of Representatives of the Philippines, Adnan Buyung Nasution, Member of the Presidential Advisory Council of the Republic of Indonesia and Dame Meg Taylor, former Ambassador of Papua New Guinea to the United States and current Secretary General of the Pacific Islands Forum Secretariat
Four MLS graduates have served as Chief Justice of Australia, more than any other Australian law school. This number includes Sir Owen Dixon, regarded as Australia's greatest ever jurist,[26] and Sir Isaac Isaacs, the first Jewish Chief Justice. Geoffrey Nettle, a current Justice of the High Court of Australia, graduated from MLS. In addition, two MLS graduates have served on the International Court of Justice: Hsu Mo and Hilary Charlesworth.
Francis Gurry, the Director General of the World Intellectual Property Organization, Gillian Triggs, the President of the Australian Human Rights Commission, and Samuel Pisar, the UNESCO Special Envoy for Holocaust Education all graduated from MLS.
MLS graduates in the business world include James P. Gorman, Chairman and CEO of Morgan Stanley, John Denton, CEO of Corrs Chambers Westgarth and Gillion McLachlan, CEO of the Australian Football League.
Legal academics who graduated from MLS include Sir David Derham, the founding Dean of Monash Law School, Greg Craven, the Vice-Chancellor of the Australian Catholic University, and Sir John Monash, a Vice-Chancellor of the University of Melbourne and decorated World War I general.
References
- ↑ Michael Crommelin. "Dean's Message". Retrieved 31 July 2010.
- ↑ http://www.law.unimelb.edu.au/melbourne-law-school/community/history/beginnings
- ↑ Waugh, John (2007). First Principles: The Melbourne Law School 1857–2007. Carlton, Vic.: Miegunyah Press. pp. 5–8. ISBN 9780522854480.
- ↑ http://www.topuniversities.com/university-rankings/university-subject-rankings/2014/law-legal-studies#sorting=rank+region=+country=+faculty=+stars=false+search=
- ↑ Waugh, John (2007). First Principles: The Melbourne Law School 1857–2007. Carlton, Vic.: Miegunyah Press. pp. 5–8, 14–16. ISBN 9780522854480.
- ↑ Waugh, John (2007). First Principles: The Melbourne Law School 1857–2007. Carlton, Vic.: Miegunyah Press. pp. 37–41. ISBN 9780522854480.
- ↑ "The Faculty of Law". Retrieved 15 February 2013.
- ↑ "Zelman Cowen, 1951–1963, 1964–1966". Retrieved 15 February 2013.
- ↑ Waugh, John (2007). First Principles: The Melbourne Law School 1857–2007. Carlton, Vic.: Miegunyah Press. pp. 176–80, 188–90. ISBN 9780522854480.
- ↑ http://www.law.unimelb.edu.au/jd/future-students/selection-criteria
- ↑ https://handbook.unimelb.edu.au/view/2012/LAWS50028
- ↑ http://www.law.unimelb.edu.au/melbourne-law-school/experience/facilities-and-technology/moot-court
- ↑ http://mulss.com/competitions/mooting
- ↑ http://www.spacemoot.org/pdfs/mr20120801.pdf
- ↑ http://www.lawyersweekly.com.au/news/curious-students-probe-space-law
- ↑ http://mulss.com/news/championship_mooters
- ↑ http://www.law.unimelb.edu.au/jd/experience/international-opportunities/student-exchange/jd-exchange-partners
- ↑ http://www.law.unimelb.edu.au/index.cfm?objectid=6614F050-D762-11E0-BED80050568D0140&sid=5727
- ↑ http://www.law.unimelb.edu.au/jd/experience/international-opportunities/degree-partnerships
- ↑ Legal citation, Guide to Legal Research, Library, University of New South Wales accessed 3 September 2011.
- ↑ http://www.law.unimelb.edu.au/melbourne-law-school/community/history/people/deans/sandford-clark
- ↑ http://www.law.unimelb.edu.au/melbourne-law-school/community/history/people/deans/colin-howard
- ↑ http://www.law.unimelb.edu.au/melbourne-law-school/community/history/people/deans/mark-weinberg
- ↑ http://www.law.unimelb.edu.au/melbourne-law-school/community/our-staff/staff-profile/username/Michael%20Crommelin
- ↑ http://www.law.unimelb.edu.au/melbourne-law-school/community/our-staff/staff-profile/username/Carolyn%20Evans
- ↑ Justice Jim Spigelman, "Australia's Greatest Jurist," presented in Sydney, May 2003.
- Campbell, Ruth. 1977. A History of the Melbourne Law School, 1857 to 1973, Faculty of Law, Parkville. ISBN 0-909454-43-4.
- Waugh, John. 2007. First Principles: The Melbourne Law School 1857–2007, Miegunyah Press, Carlton, Vic. ISBN 9780522854480.
Coordinates: 37°48′09″S 144°57′36″E / 37.8024°S 144.9600°E
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