Melbourne Law School and host Jon Faine bring you Justice: a weekly podcast about the law behind the news.
More than a third of 2800 young Australian workers surveyedreported having been ripped off by employers, according to a new study by Professor John Howe, of Melbourne Law School. They have been underpaid, not paid, forced to pay for equipment or clothing…. What remedies are available, and what reform is needed?
You can access the Fair Day's Work portal mentioned in the podcast, here.
And you can read more about the project here.
Melbourne Law School and host Jon Faine bring you the last episode of season one of Justice: a weekly podcast about the law behind the news.
Half of lawyers surveyed say they endure a poor workplace culture, and their discontent fuels expensive attrition rates.
One in ten lawyers plan to leave the profession in the next 12months, one in three want to leave their employer in the next 12 months, and a third say they feel depressed or anxious. What is going wrong inside the profession that holds the rest of us to account? Professor Julian Webb of Melbourne Law School explains the new survey behind these findings.
READ MORE ON THE SURVEY OF LAWYERS’ WELLBEING IN THE WORKPLACE:
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Melbourne Law School and host Jon Faine bring you Justice: a weekly podcast about the law behind the news.
Around two-thirds of Australian organisations use artificialintelligence computer programs to recruit new staff. But Dr Natalie Sheard,a researcher with Melbourne Law School, found that there are serious risks that AI used to screen job applicants will discriminate against women, older applicants and minority groups, eliminating them as a prospect before a humanbeing gets a chance to even see their applications. Will it all end in a class action?
READ MORE ON AI DISCRIMINATION IN RECRUITMENT:
This episode contains material some people might find disturbing. Listener discretion is advised.
Melbourne Law School and host Jon Faine bring you Justice: a weekly podcast about the law behind the news.
More than half of young people are using consensual strangulation during sex (“choking”), but few understand the risks. Should we re-think what it means to consent under the law? Melbourne Law School's Professor Heather Douglas explains her ground-breaking research on this rising and dangerous pastime.
If this episode has raised any issues for you, you can contact the Lifeline Australia telephone support service on 13 11 14, or Project Respect on 0477 001 110 by phone call, text or WhatsApp.
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Melbourne Law School and host Jon Faine bring you Justice: a weekly podcast about the law behind the news.
Australian employers have joined an international legal case that challenges the right of workers to strike. What will it mean for Australian workers if they win? We speak with Professor Sean Cooney of Melbourne Law School, who has written submissions for this globally significant case before the International Court of Justice.
READ MORE ON ICJ CASE ON THE RIGHT TO STRIKE:
This episode contains material some people might find disturbing. Listener discretion is advised.
Melbourne Law School and host Jon Faine bring you Justice: a weekly podcast about the law behind the news.
Since the camera was invented, men have been misusing women’s images for profit. Copyright, defamation and privacy laws have all been called on to stop it, but AI and 'deep fake' porn is a new frontier. Melbourne Law School researcher Dr Jessica Lake talks about recent cases and the existing law and calls for reforms to better protect women.
If this episode has raised any issues for you, you can contact the Lifeline Australia telephone support service on 13 11 14, or Project Respect on 0477 001 110 by phone call, text or WhatsApp.
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Melbourne Law School and host Jon Faine bring you Justice: a weekly podcast about the law behind the news.
There is a legal vacuum behind attempts to forge a ceasefire inthe wars in Gaza and Ukraine. Does international law have any real power in these times of global turmoil? And how can a ceasefire agreement be enforced when one party is a ‘non-state entity’? Dr Marika Sosnowski from the Peter McMullinCentre on Statelessness at Melbourne Law School explains.
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Melbourne Law School and host Jon Faine bring you Justice: a weekly podcast about the law behind the news.
Patients often want the right to record some consultations, butdoctors are not so keen and sometimes refuse to permit it. What does the law say? We talk to Dr Megan Prictor, a Melbourne Law School expert researching the law of privacy.
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Melbourne Law School and host Jon Faine bring you Justice: a weekly podcast about the law behind the news.
President Trump is stress testing the Constitution of the USA inways that have never been seen, drawing on strategies we see in authoritarian countries. Will judges and the courts frustrate his efforts to assume more power than any previous President? We ask constitutional law scholar Associate Professor William Partlett, of Melbourne Law School, to explain.
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Justice is a podcast of Melbourne Law School, University of Melbourne.
This episode contains material some people might find distressing. Listener discretion is advised.
Melbourne Law School and host Jon Faine bring you Justice, a weekly podcast about the law behind the news.
A 14-year-old boy in the US recently took his own life after an AI chatbot ‘companion’ he created repeatedly entreated him to ‘please come home to me’. What, if anything, can the law do about the dark side of these new computer-based ‘friends’?
Australia's leading AI law expert, Professor Jeannie Paterson of the Centre for Artificial Intelligence and Digital Ethics, explains.
If this episode has raised any issues for you, you can contact the Lifeline Australia telephone support service on 13 11 14.
Further reading on AI Companions:
Justice is a podcast of Melbourne Law School, University of Melbourne.