News and updates

WTO dispute settlement as a training exercise?

Monday 14 October 2013
by Jonathan Liberman
Simon Lacey, a Jakarta-based international trade-law practitioner, writes in the Jakarta Globe that he advised Indonesia to challenge Australia's plain packaging legislation in the WTO because it would be a good opportunity to build Indonesia's WTO dispute settlement experience - particularly because the tobacco industry would be footing the bill. We comment on Lacey's perspective and on his judgment that Australia's plain packaging is ‘almost certainly ... an act of regulatory over-reach' and ‘a silly political calculation'. Read more >: WTO dispute settlement as a training exercise?

Waiting out the legal challenges to plain packaging - playing into the tobacco industry's hands?

Friday 4 October 2013
by Jonathan Liberman
Nearly two years after the passage of Australia's plain packaging legislation, and ten months after it came fully into effect, the international legal challenges continue. Slowly. And the tobacco industry, which is directly pursuing one of the challenges and providing support to the others, is telling governments considering stronger tobacco control measures to wait until the challenges are resolved. Read more >: Waiting out the legal challenges to plain packaging - playing into the tobacco industry's hands?

From Australia to Thailand - defending tobacco packaging laws against multinational tobacco industry lawsuits

Friday 27 September 2013
by Jonathan Liberman
I had the great privilege of being in Bangkok, Thailand, last week to talk with public health and legal colleagues about Thailand's defence of lawsuits brought against it by the multinational tobacco industry. Read more >: From Australia to Thailand - defending tobacco packaging laws against multinational tobacco industry lawsuits

Cancer Voices Australia v Myriad Genetics Inc: Reflections on a Patent Controversy

Wednesday 11 September 2013
by Tarishi Desai
Should human cancer disposing genes be considered patentable inventions? What exactly is an ‘invention'? What impact would this have on patient healthcare and cancer research? How does Australia's patent law system operate? These were some of the questions I had to consider when analysing the Federal Court of Australia's historic ruling on the practice of ‘gene patenting' in Cancer Voices Australia v Myriad Genetics Inc during my internship with the McCabe Centre for Law and Cancer, undertaken earlier this year in partnership with the Melbourne Law School. Read more >: Cancer Voices Australia v Myriad Genetics Inc: Reflections on a Patent Controversy

Making the law work better for people affected by cancer: employment

Wednesday 4 September 2013
by Deborah Lawson and Sondra Davoren
While many employers are supportive when an employee is affected by cancer, retaining, returning to, or finding new employment can be difficult for some people who have or have had cancer.  Read more >: Making the law work better for people affected by cancer: employment

Making the law work better for people affected by cancer: support for travel for treatment

Friday 19 April 2013
by Deborah Lawson and Sondra Davoren
Across Australia, as geographical isolation increases, cancer care is less accessible. According to the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare, the further from a metropolitan centre a person with cancer lives, the more likely they are to die within five years of diagnosis. For some cancers, those who live remotely are up to 300% more likely to die within five years of diagnosis. In the second blog of our series, we outline some of the challenges for people who need to travel long distances for cancer treatment. Read more >: Making the law work better for people affected by cancer: support for travel for treatment

Flagging down a cab or booking a chauffeur-driven limousine? Are we lowering the Bar?

Friday 5 April 2013
by Jonathan Liberman
Under the cab rank rule, a barrister should not refuse a brief on the basis of the objectionableness of a potential client’s behaviour or character. The rule was the subject of a very interesting event we co-hosted last month, ‘Is it the end of the line for the cab rank rule?’, with Monash University’s Centre for Regulatory Studies on the occasion of the visit to Melbourne of UK Professor John Flood, who has recently published a paper, with Professor Morten Hviid, ‘The Cab Rank Rule: Its Meaning and Purpose in the New Legal Services Market’ Read more >: Flagging down a cab or booking a chauffeur-driven limousine? Are we lowering the Bar?

Making the law work better for people affected by cancer: a McCabe Centre issues paper

Tuesday 2 April 2013
by Sondra Davoren and Deborah Lawson
Whether we're consciously aware of it or not, the law influences how people make decisions about health care, treatment and support. This is no different for people affected by cancer. Read more >: Making the law work better for people affected by cancer: a McCabe Centre issues paper

McCabe Centre: one year on

Monday 4 February 2013
by Jonathan Liberman
Today, World Cancer Day, marks a year since the McCabe Centre commenced operation - as good a time as any for us to enter the blogosphere. We'll be blogging on a wide range of law-and-cancer issues over the months and years ahead, and running contributions from guest bloggers. So, please keep an eye on this page, and feel free to send us suggestions. Read more >: McCabe Centre: one year on
Total 129 articles in this section.
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