Table of authors and articles
- Allsop, J
- Continuing judicial education: the Australian experience
- Technology and the future of the courts
- Australian National Imams Council (ANIC), The
- Explanatory note on the judicial process and participation of Muslims
- Basten, J
- Judicial education on “gender awareness” in Australia
- Bathurst, T F
- Who judges the judges, and how should they be judged?
- “Something more, something less”: the contemporary meaning of open justice
- Doing right by “all manner of people”: building a more inclusive legal system
- Trust in the judiciary
- Efficient, informal and fair: courts delivering under pressure
- Demystifying judicial commissions
- Community confidence in the justice system: the role of public opinion
- ADR, ODR and AI-DR, or do we even need courts anymore?
- Tweeters, posters and grammers beware: discovery and social media evidence
- Beazley, M
- Judgment writing in final and intermediate courts of appeal: “a dalliance on a curiosity”
- The intersection of the Australian law and the Islamic faith: a selection of cases
- Beech-Jones, R
- Judgment writing: get smart
- Bromberg, M
- Right here waiting for you: the new social media chapter in the Australian Guide to Judicial Conduct
- Thank you for being a friend? Examining social media friendship between judicial officers and lawyers post Charisteas v Charisteas
- Haters gonna hate: when the public uses social media to comment critically or maliciously about judicial officers
- Burke, A
- Just, quick and cheap? Civil dispute resolution and technology
- Cowdery, N
- Sentencing and disadvantage: the use of research to inform the court
- Dhanji, H
- Cultural diversity in the law: it is not revolution — but we are going to occupy the buildings
- Dive, R
- The trauma-informed approach of the Drug Court of NSW
- Douglass, M
- A road less travelled: footprints from trauma
- Duncombe, S
- The trauma-informed approach of the NSW Youth Koori Court
- Dyson, J
- Delay too often defeats justice
- Eastman, K
- Judicial bullying: let’s have a conversation
- Ekert, A
- Haters gonna hate: when the public uses social media to comment critically or maliciously about judicial officers
- Farrands, D
- Artificial intelligence and litigation — future possibilities
- Faulks, J
- Self-represented litigants: tackling the challenge
- Flannery, L
- Dealing with unrepresented litigants in lengthy and complex trials
- Gageler, S
- Why write judgments
- Alternative facts in the courts
- Gibson, J
- Judges, cyberspace and social media
- Gleeson, A M
- Some legal scenery
- The future of judicial education
- Gleeson, J
- Judicial independence and liberal democracy
- Advancing judicial legitimacy: the stakes and the means
- Gravett, W
- The dark side of artificial intelligence: challenges for the legal system
- Guthrie, C
- Does unconscious racial bias affect trial judges?
- Hanley, S
- The Penrith District Court approach to efficiency in trial management
- Harvey, P
- Identifying and combatting judicial stress
- Heilpern, D
- Lifting the judicial veil — vicarious trauma, PTSD and the judiciary: a personal story
- Hogan-Doran, D
- Computer says “no”: automation, algorithms and artificial intelligence in Government decision-making
- Hora, P
- The trauma-informed courtroom
- Hulbert, C
- The psychological impact of judicial work: Australia’s first empirical research measuring judicial stress and wellbeing
- Hunter, J
- A fragile bastion: UNSW judicial traumatic stress study
- Sentencing and disadvantage: the use of research to inform the court
- Hunt, W
- Adopting a trauma-informed approach in the District Court of NSW
- Johnson, P
- Sovereign citizens: ideology, impacts and judicial responses
- Johnson, S L
- Does unconscious racial bias affect trial judges?
- Johnston, J
- Hastening slowly: what the hare and the tortoise might teach the judiciary about social media
- Kalowski, J
- Managing courtroom communication: reflections of an observer
- Keane, P
- The idea of the professional judge: multiple versus single appellate judgments
- The idea of the professional judge: the challenges of communication
- Kemp, P
- A fragile bastion: UNSW judicial traumatic stress study
- Kennedy, E
- Introducing solutions for maintaining positive psychological health: the judicial wellbeing portal
- Kiefel, S
- Judicial independence — from what and to what end?
- Shaping legal minds — the ethical mind
- Kimber, M
- Conciliation and mediation — a practical note
- King, M
- The importance of trauma-informed court practice
- Kirby, M
- Judicial stress and judicial bullying
- Kunc, F
- Where to next? Building a culture
- Kyrou, E
- Attributes of a good judge
- Managing litigants in person
- Lester, G
- The querulant litigant
- Li, B
- Just, quick and cheap? Civil dispute resolution and technology
- Lind, D
- Basic categories of argumentation in legal reasoning
- Lloyd, D
- How to develop effective judgment writing
- Lumley, K
- Without fear or favour, affection or ill will: addressing gender bias in NSW judicial education
- Mack, K
- Impartiality and emotion in judicial work
- Martin, W
- Introducing the national online cultural diversity training program
- Reflecting on the practice of non-adversarial justice
- McCarthy, S
- The trauma-informed barrister
- McMahon, R
- Sentencing and disadvantage: the use of research to inform the court
- Mostyn, N
- The craft of judging and legal reasoning
- Nettle, G
- Technology and the law
- Neuberger, D
- “Judge not, that ye be not judged”: judging judicial decision-making
- Nomchong, K
- Judicial bullying: the view from the bar
- Sexual harassment and the judiciary
- Olbrich, S
- Recommended national standards for working with interpreters in courts and tribunals
- Opeskin, B
- Can implicit bias in judicial decision-making be cured by greater diversity on the Bench?
- O’Neill, B
- Decolonising the mind: working with transgenerational trauma and First Nations Peoples
- O’Sullivan, K
- A fragile bastion: UNSW judicial traumatic stress study
- Painting, M
- The national certification system for the translating and interpreting profession in Australia
- Pathé, M
- What do judicial officers need to know about sovereign citizens?
- Payne, A
- Making good decisions
- Perry, M
- What do judicial officers need to know about the risks of AI?
- Phillips, J
- Judicial bullying
- Rachlinski, J
- Does unconscious racial bias affect trial judges?
- Rares, S
- Speaking the right media language
- Rauf, B
- After R v Bayda; R v Namoa (No 8): continuing the dialogue with academics of Islam
- Raymond, J
- Five ways to improve your judgment writing
- The architecture of argument
- Roach Anleu, S
- Impartiality and emotion in judicial work
- Sackville, R
- Lawyers and judges: the fifth attribute
- Schmatt, E
- International guiding principles for judicial education
- Schrever, C
- Australia’s first research measuring judicial stress: what does it mean for judicial officers and the courts?
- The psychological impact of judicial work: Australia’s first empirical research measuring judicial stress and wellbeing
- Schwartz, S
- Doing right by “all manner of people”: building a more inclusive legal system
- Sourdin, T
- Just, quick and cheap? Civil dispute resolution and technology
- The psychological impact of judicial work: Australia’s first empirical research measuring judicial stress and wellbeing
- Judge v robot? Artificial intelligence and judicial decision-making
- Susskind, R
- Online justice: The way of the future?
- Vines, P
- A fragile bastion: UNSW judicial traumatic stress study
- Vos, G
- AI — Transforming the work of lawyers and judges
- Wallace, A
- Hastening slowly: what the hare and the tortoise might teach the judiciary about social media
- Waterworth, R
- Measuring legal actor contributions in court: judges’ roles, therapeutic alliance and therapeutic change
- Weinberg, M
- Adequate, sufficient and excessive reasons
- Wheeler, C
- Responding to unreasonably persistent litigants
- Wistrich, A
- Does unconscious racial bias affect trial judges?
- Wood, H
- Cultural diversity: reflections on the role of the judge in ensuring a fair trial
- Young, P
- Fact-finding made easy