Law Report - Separate Stories Podcast

  • Author: Vários
  • Narrator: Vários
  • Publisher: Podcast
  • Duration: 114:06:11
  • More information

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Synopsis

Informative, jargon-free stories about law reform, legal education, test cases, miscarriages of justice and legal culture. The Law Report makes the law accessible.

Episodes

  • Passenger injured in stolen car denied compensation and COVID-19 death ruled workplace injury

    31/08/2021 Duration: 28min

    Should compensation be denied to a passenger in a stolen vehicle who was seriously injured when it crashed? And, a New South Wales Tribunal has ruled that a COVID-19 death can be classified as a work-related injury.

  • What future for Afghanistan after Taliban return?

    24/08/2021 Duration: 28min

    What will the Taliban's return to power in Afghanistan mean for women and human rights?

  • Victorian tenant evicted after COVID19 moratorium ends. Also, can you sue over negative online reviews?

    17/08/2021 Duration: 28min

    The Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal has found that landlords can evict tenants for non-payment of rent during the big Victorian lockdown of 2020. It's a ruling that could affect thousands of vulnerable renters. And, should doctors, lawyers and other professionals be able to sue someone who posts a negative online review?

  • Balancing individual and community rights in a pandemic

    10/08/2021 Duration: 28min

    As the COVID19 pandemic grips NSW, how do we balance the rights of an individual with those of the broader community? And the Victorian Ombudsman has released a report detailing human rights breaches, many dealing with ensuring compliance with COVID 19 public orders.  

  • WA Parliament debates new child protection laws

    03/08/2021 Duration: 28min

    This week, the WA parliament is debating new child protection legislation.  Meanwhile a program called Aboriginal Family Led Decision Making is being piloted. Will new laws and programs reduce the vast over representation of Indigenous children in out-of-home care, currently seventeen times more likely than non-Indigenous children?

  • Covid19 vaccination litigation in the US and transporting jurors virtually to the scene of the crime

    27/07/2021 Duration: 28min

    In the USA there is a growing number of legal disputes involving employees, consumers and university students who are challenging mandatory vaccination requirements. And new research suggests that virtual reality headsets could help jurors reach fairer verdicts in complex criminal trials.

  • Proceeds of crime

    20/07/2021 Duration: 28min

    If you earn a million dollars from selling drugs and are convicted under proceeds of crime legislation, you don’t get to keep it. But what if that conviction is quashed years later? Some of the most notorious figures in the gangland era are heading back to courts to appeal their convictions following the Nicola Gobbo scandal. What happens to the 70 million dollars confiscated? Greg Muller asks, what are the laws around proceeds of crime and are they always fair?    

  • Climate change litigation

    13/07/2021 Duration: 28min

    Climate change is increasingly being raised in courtrooms around the world. The latest was brought by eight Australian school students and a nun who argued that the government owed a duty of care to protect children from the harmful effects of climate change. As journalist Greg Muller reports, climate change is now seen as a legal and financial risk as well as an environmental one.  

  • Bougainville independence talks underway. And are judges too lenient when sentencing sex offenders?

    06/07/2021 Duration: 28min

    Could we soon see the creation of a brand new country immediately to Australia's north? PNG's Prime Minister and the President of the Autonomous Bougainville Government are negotiating Bougainville's future. Also, what are the most important factors that judges weigh up when sentencing sex offenders? And are judges out of touch with community expectations?

  • Overwhelming support for constitutionally enshrined indigenous voice

    29/06/2021 Duration: 28min

    The Uluru Statement from the Heart called for a constitutionally enshrined indigenous voice to parliament. In response, the federal government created a co-design process, which produced an interim report outlining what form this voice might take. A new report has found that 90% of the 2500 submissions received following the interim report support constitutional enshrinement.

  • Witness K and the public interest. And should Australia adopt private sponsorship of refugees Canada style?

    22/06/2021 Duration: 28min

    Can revealing Australia’s security operations ever be in the public interest? A former spy, Witness K received a three-month suspended sentence for revealing the Australian government spied on the Timor Leste government during negotiations over oil and gas resources in the Timor Strait. And, since the 1970s, over 300,000 refugees have settled in Canada under the country’s private sponsorship scheme. Could a similar scheme work in Australia?

  • Crime and Justice in the Torres Strait and Cape York’s Licensing Muster program

    15/06/2021 Duration: 28min

    Torres Strait's low crime rate, the Muster program

  • Vaccine passports and global snapshot of LGBTQI discrimination

    08/06/2021 Duration: 28min

    Some countries and states have introduced a Vaccine Passport, to allow more domestic and international movement and businesses to return. What are the technical and legal obstacles to a COVID-19 vaccine passport here in Australia? And in this Pride Month, while the LGBTQI community has a lot to celebrate in Australia, in many countries they face ongoing legal discrimination, even the death penalty.

  • Porter v ABC and  AGL v Greenpeace

    01/06/2021 Duration: 28min

    Former Attorney General Christian Porter has discontinued his defamation litigation against the ABC. And power company AGL is taking Greenpeace to court arguing breach of trademark and copyright. AGL says the activist group should not have used its trademark in a series of parody advertisements that highlights its CO2 emissions.

  • Victoria's Yoo-rrook Justice Commission and new research on Magistrate stress levels

    25/05/2021 Duration: 28min

    We speak to the Chair and one of other the four commissioners who will preside over Victoria's ground breaking Yoo-rrook or Justice Commission. And new research has found that local court magistrates are the state-based judicial officers who suffer most from work-related stress.

  • Improving the justice system for sexual assault survivors

    18/05/2021 Duration: 28min

    Many victim survivors of sexual assault say they found giving evidence at trial a harrowing and re-traumatising experience. The Victorian Law Reform Commission is currently conducting an inquiry into ways to improve the responses of the justice system to sexual offences.  

  • Federal Court rejects challenge to India travel ban. And rugby's no fault standdown rule [Updated audio]

    11/05/2021 Duration: 28min

    The Federal Court dismissed a challenge to the Morrison government's ban on Australian citizens returning from India. Justice Thawley ruled that the government was acting within its powers under the Biosecurity Act 2015. And should professional sports people be able to continue playing when facing serious criminal charges?

  • Drug driving truckies and outraging public decency

    04/05/2021 Duration: 28min

    Mohinder Singh, the truck driver responsible for the deaths of four Victorian police officers has been sentenced to a non parole period of 18 years. Richard Pusey, who callously filmed the tragedy has also been sentenced to 10 months jail after pleading guilty to a number of offences including outraging public decency. And, why did the NSW Workers Commission award $500,000 to the family of a truck driver who was high on ice and died after crashing his rig into a home, injuring a sleeping pensioner?

  • Australia's whistle-blower protection laws. And is it time for a vaccine injury compensation scheme?

    27/04/2021 Duration: 28min

    Australia's whistle-blower laws will be in the spotlight when a long-running, high-profile prosecution involving former ATO officer Richard Boyle comes back before the courts. Also, if a vaccine causes an injury, many countries have a vaccine injury compensation scheme. Do we need one in Australia?

  • Court rules couples can conspire and how brain implants might transform criminal law

    20/04/2021 Duration: 28min

    The High Court of Australia rules that a married couple can conspire to commit a crime. Also, the challenges posed by emerging neuro technologies.

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