Recent news
21
May
2020
Dr Will Bateman has been appointed chief investigator (law) of the interdisciplinary Humanising Machine Intelligence project funded by the ANU Grand Challenges scheme.
19
May
2020
Jeremy Farrall is an Associate Professor at ANU College of Law.
15
May
2020
ANU Bachelor of International Security Studies/Laws (Hons) student Max Claessens reflects on his participation in the 2020 Harvard Project for Asian and International Relations Conference.
13
May
2020
Joyce Yang is Bachelor of Arts/Laws (Hons) student at ANU College of Law
13
May
2020
Caitlyn McKenzie is a Juris Doctor student at ANU College of Law
12
May
2020
Benjamin Ettinger is a PhD candidate at ANU College of Law.
06
May
2020
ANU Bachelor of Asian Studies/Laws (Hons) student Caitlin O’Brien reveals why she created a children's book for her assessment in Selected Topics in Australian-United States Comparative Laws (LAWS4257).
28
Apr
2020
When Professor Mark Nolan first arrived in Canberra as a teenager in 1990, he never imagined it would mark the start of a 30-plus-year relationship at The Australian National University.
Pages
29 Jun 2022
The Future of EU Sanctions against Russia: Objectives, Frozen Assets, and Humanitarian Impact
Anton Moiseienko write in Eucrim
27 Jun 2022
What the Roe v Wade US Supreme decision means for Australia
Ryan Goss quoted in Canberra Times
14 Jun 2022
Julian Assange: Does Wikileaks founder have a powerful ally in new Australian PM?
Donald Rothwell quoted in BBC News
14 Jun 2022
China’s Claims on Taiwan Strait Could Raise Tensions With US
Donald Rothwell quoted in Bloomberg News
10 Jun 2022
The Trojan Horse of the global drug wars: from Canberra to Sinaloa
Desmond Manderson writes in The Canberra Times
7 Jun 2022
‘A dangerous act’: how a Chinese fighter jet intercepted an RAAF aircraft and what happens next
Donald Rothwell quoted in The Guardian
7 Jun 2022
The Meaning of Diversity and its Relevance to Corporate Governance
Akshaya Kamalnath speaks to Peking University School of Transnational Law
6 Jun 2022
Our new environment super-department sounds great in theory. But one department for two ministers is risky
Peter Burnett write in The Conversation