Law: Conference Contributions: Recent submissions
Now showing items 41-60 of 94
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The gendered consequences of Brexit
(2019) -
Circumstances of a Pacific atoll people in diaspora: a retrospective analysis of I-Nikunau
(LMU Munich, Department for Social and Cultural Anthropology, 2017)Life for people on many atolls is undoubtedly hard, frequently affected by droughts, rough seas and other adverse climatic conditions to name a few. It is little wonder then that kinship is the foundation of many atoll ... -
Do Lawyers make a Distinctive Contribution to Tax Policy-making?: Reflections on the Contributions of Lawyers to Tax Policy-making in New Zealand
(2017)Lawyers play an important part in tax policy making in New Zealand (NZ). This paper briefly reviews NZ’s Generic Tax Policy Process (GTPP), and then turns it focus on the important contributions legal practitioners and ... -
Precarious Work and Work-Family Reconciliation: Options for Law Reforms
(University of Canterbury. Department of Accounting and Information Systems, 2015) -
Showing judges how to walk the walk: the Feminist Judgments Project Aotearoa
(University of Canterbury. School of Law, 2016) -
False dichotomies in administrative law : from there to here
(University of Canterbury. School of Law, 2015)This article revisits our administrative law journey since the Second World War (1939-1945). It is a journey worth recounting because it reveals how starkly our administrative law has changed over a short, finite period ... -
Informed Consent to Breech Birth
(University of Canterbury. School of Law, 2015) -
Redefining Parenthood: Beyond Biology
(University of Canterbury. School of Law, 2016)Role of genetic relationship between intending parents and the surrogate-born child in determining parenthood. Contradictions within the legal position. In surrogacy the usual aspects of motherhood is effectively split ... -
Seales v Attorney-General (2015) - Vulnerability
(University of Canterbury. School of Law, 2016) -
Redundancy and the employer's right to organise and run its business
(University of Canterbury. School of Law, 2015)The paper has examined the tension between, on one hand, the business management obligations of employers (particularly those arising from the duties in the Companies Act 1993 applying to directors), and, on the other hand, ... -
The Use of University Law Clinics for Legal Reform
(University of Canterbury. School of Law, 2015) -
What have genes got to do with it?
(University of Canterbury. School of Law, 2015) -
Reframing the EU concept of worker: Can sex-workers be workers?
(University of Canterbury. Department of Accounting and Information Systems, 2015)When applying European Union (EU) law, the concept of worker is an EU concept that can only be defined by the Court of Justice to assess EU rights (Case 53/81 Levin; Case 66/85 Lawrie-Blum; Case 196/87 Steyman). The Court ... -
Exploring the EU concept of worker: Are sex-workers in decriminalised or regulated legal environment just normal workers?
(University of Canterbury. Department of Accounting and Information Systems, 2015) -
Episiotomy and consent
(University of Canterbury. School of Law, 2014) -
Informed Consent to Breech Birth: the Midwifery Relationship
(University of Canterbury. School of Law, 2014) -
Media Law and Policy in the Internet Age: Regulatory responses from a southern archipelago
(University of Canterbury. School of Law, 2013)New Zealanders are enthusiastic adopters of new technology and our use of the internet has been described as at near saturation point. In a 2013 survey, 81% of respondents rated the internet as important or very important. ... -
Managing Non-Traditional Security Concerns in the Context of Competing Maritime Claims: A Path to Peace or a Road to Nowhere
(University of Canterbury. School of Law, 2014)The South China Sea (SCS), which extends over 3.5 million kilometres with an average depth of 2000 metres1 has become synonymous with intractable territorial and maritime delimitation disputes with the disagreement over ...