Melbourne Law School | |
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![]() Law School Building | |
Motto | Postera Crescam Laude |
Parent school | University of Melbourne |
Established | 1857 |
School type | Publiclaw school |
Dean | Matthew Harding |
Location | Carlton,Victoria,Australia |
Website | www.law.unimelb.edu.au |
Melbourne Law School is one of the professionalgraduate schools of theUniversity of Melbourne. Located inCarlton, Victoria, Melbourne Law School is Australia's oldest law school,[1][2] and offersJ.D.,LL.M,Ph.D, andLL.D degrees. In 2021–22,THE World University Rankings ranked the law school as 5th best in the world and first both in Australia and Asia-Pacific.[3]
Alumni of Melbourne Law School include fourprime ministers of Australia, threegovernors-general, fourchief justices of Australia and thirteen Commonwealthattorneys-general. Alumni include a current judge of theInternational Court of Justice, a current justice of theHigh Court of Australia, the current chief justice of theFamily Court of Australia, the currentgovernor of Victoria, the currentsolicitor-general of Australia, the current president of theAustralian Human Rights Commission, the currentVictorian Equal Opportunity and Human Rights Commissioner and the current chairwoman of theVictorian Bar Council.
Established in 1857, Melbourne Law School initially offered LL.B degrees for those seeking a first degree in law. However, in 2007 Melbourne Law School ceased accepting students into this program and instead offered only a J.D. Admission to Melbourne Law School is competitive, with applicants typically requiring a distinction average or higher in their undergraduate degree for admission to its J.D. program. Applicants seeking to study the LL.M program require high results in their undergraduate law studies.
Melbourne Law School publishes a number of academic journals, including theMelbourne University Law Review, theMelbourne Journal of International Law and theAustralian Journal of Labour Law. Melbourne Law School is host to a number of research centres and institutes, specialising in a wide variety of legal fields. It also offers subjects taught overseas and partner programs with leading international law schools. The Law Library of Melbourne Law School encompasses three floors offering access to a variety of resources including periodicals and law journals. Students can participate in a number of organisations designed to enrich student life.
There was no organised legal education in Australia until the start oflectures at Melbourne Law School in 1857.[4]: 5–8 Prior to this, the majority ofcommon-law lawyers had never attended university.[4]: 1 A small proportion of people in theUnited States,England and hercolonies, including Australia at the time, chose to study law in college before entering the legal profession.[4]: 1–5 Like many of its peers, the University of Melbourne did not teach law at its inception in 1855, although by the second year of teaching enrolments at the institution were so low that teaching in the fields of law and medicine was suggested in order to attract students.[4]: 7 Compared to sciences that needed expensive equipment, law could be taught more affordably and draw in a useful number of students.[5]
New admission roles created by the Supreme Court of Victoria gave prospective lawyers the choice between completing an exam administered by the Court, or completing a course of study at Melbourne Law School, with the thirty-three law students of 1857 more than doubling total enrolments at the university.[4]: 7
Richard Clarke Sewell was the first appointed lecturer in law.[4]: 5–8 Sewell was educated and qualified; however, he was eventually found to be unsuitable for the role to which he was appointed. Born in England, Sewell had twelve siblings. His father was a solicitor. Sewell was educated at Winchester and then Oxford University, becoming a fellow ofMagdalen College and graduating with a doctorate in civil law. He came to Victoria in 1855, although his reason for doing so is unclear.[4]: 8–9 He was admitted to the Victorian bar, where he practiced criminal law. After Sewell was hired, the new course's outline was finalised, and he may have shared part of the design credit. The course started with an encyclopaedic introduction and was split into terms and years rather than subjects. Sewell struggled with the commitments of teaching, with his initial lectures bland and poorly received by students. Attendance started to fall, and Sewell resigned.[4]: 10–14
The first students studied for a certificate that, with practical training, qualified them for admission to legal practice. In 1860 they were given the additional option of studying for a degree.[6]
Melbourne Law School was expanded and reorganised in 1873, becoming the Faculty of Law.[7][8] In 1873,William Hearn was appointed as the firstdean of Melbourne Law School, lecturing in subjects such as constitutional law. Hearn would go on to be elected to theVictorian Legislative Council forCentral Province.
Sir William Harrison Moore was appointed as the third dean of Melbourne Law School, succeedingEdward Jenks. Moore was somewhat controversial as a new dean, proposing thatRoman law (a strong influence on thecivil law system predominant inEurope, but less important to thecommon law system in Australia) no longer be taught at the university, and the removal of legal procedure as a separateundergraduate course.[9]
The first woman to enrol at Melbourne Law School wasFlos Greig in 1897. Greig would graduate in 1903, the first woman in Victoria to do so, and only the second in the country, afterAda Evans who graduated the previous year from theUniversity of Sydney. Greig received third-class honours for her degree, placing her second in her year level.
Melbourne Law School under Moore opened its doors to practising lawyers in addition to academics, visiting lecturers in the year of 1908 including people such asHigh Court JusticeH. B. Higgins,Chief Justice of Victoria SirJohn Madden, and judge of theSupreme Court of VictoriaLeo Cussen.[10] The school, located then in what is now known as the "Old Law" building, struggled for room and resources, Moore having to contribute some of his personal library for the use of students, and some lectures having to be held in the Supreme Court building in the city.[10]
The school continued to grow throughout the 19th and 20th centuries, and underwent a major transformation with the appointment ofSir Zelman Cowen as dean in 1951. Sir Zelman shaped Melbourne Law School after the United States model, rather than the British model that is common in Australia. Sir Zelman reformed teaching, research and academic recruitment. Under his stewardship, full-time academics came to dominate teaching, instead of part-time practitioners. Many prominent international academics were invited to study at the school, and many Australians were given the opportunity to study abroad.[11][12]
In 2007, Melbourne Law School accepted its last cohort ofLL.B students. From 2008 the only degree offered by Melbourne Law School qualifying for legal practice is the graduate-entryJD. This change to an entirely graduate law school is consistent with university-wide changes occurring underVice-ChancellorGlyn Davis'sMelbourne Model, although Melbourne Law School does offer some subjects to the university'sundergraduate students (known as 'breadth' subjects).
Applicants for the Juris Doctor program require a three-year bachelor's degree or equivalent.[13] The performance of an applicant in this degree and any previous tertiary study is assessed. For a competitive application, the weighted average mark (WAM) across tertiary studies must be generally be at least 70%.[13] The requirements are based on theacademic grading system in Australia, which means students must typically achieve the grade of Distinction throughout their studies in order to be admitted, or the equivalent of a 3.5 GPA or above when converting for the academicgrading system used in the United States.
The school previously required the law school admissions test (LSAT) be sat, with the results considered in deciding whether to admit an applicant. In 2022, the school announced the LSAT would no longer be required.[14] The board of admissions removed the requirement due to the impact of COVID-19 on students, and initially planned to reinstate the requirement once restrictions were eased. However, the school permanently removed the LSAT as doing so increased diversity and access to the program while maintaining strong academic standards.[15] The process of removing the LSAT requirement was criticised by the University of Melbourne Student Union, noting the WAM requirement remained high and "severe lack of organisation displayed by the School" in not providing students sufficient notice or detail surrounding the decision.[15]
Students studying the J.D. program do so in either aCommonwealth Supported Place or full-fee paying place. Fees for students in a Commonwealth Supported Place were $15,142 per year in 2023,[16] while fees for full-fee paying students were $42,784 per year.[17] Eligible students in either fee type may defer payment of tuition through theHigher Education Loan Program.
Melbourne Law School is host to a number of research centres and institutes, specialising in a wide variety of legal fields:[18]
Mooting at Melbourne Law School was made mandatory in 1958.[4]: 163 Mooting continues to be mandated as assessment at Melbourne Law School for some core J.D. subjects, such asconstitutional law,[19] and is widely pursued by the student body in both internal and external moot court competitions. Melbourne Law School's internal moot court competition takes place in Melbourne Law School's purpose-built moot court.[20] It is organised and run each year by the Melbourne University Law Students' Society, and is currently sponsored by a number of commercial law firms.[21] Melbourne Law School students have achieved success in multiple international moot court competitions. Teams from Melbourne Law School have won thePhilip C. Jessup International Law Moot Court Competition and theELSA Moot Court Competition three times, and in 2012 a team from Melbourne Law School won the IASLA Space Law Moot Court Competition.[22] A Melbourne Law School team also won the inaugural Victorian Championship Moot in 2013.[23]
Melbourne Law School offers subjects taught inNew York City,Washington, D.C.,Delhi,Shanghai andGeneva, and has partner programs with many of the world's leading law schools, includingUniversity of Virginia School of Law,Georgetown University Law Center,University of Toronto Faculty of Law, and theNational University of Singapore Faculty of Law. Melbourne Law School is a founding member of theCenter for Transnational Legal Studies inLondon, and contributes both staff and students to the Center every year. Additionally, Melbourne Law School hasdual degree arrangements with theUniversity of Oxford, theUniversity of Cambridge, the National University of Singapore Faculty of Law,New York University School of Law, and theUniversity of British Columbia's Peter A. Allard School of Law.[24]
The law library is located on levels 3, 4 and 5 of Melbourne Law School at the Parkville Campus of the university. The law library offers research tools that include authorised law reports, Australian Case Citator Comparison, deep linking information, keeping up to date in law, legal abbreviations, legal citation style guides, reference management, style guides for authors, and theses advice.[25] The catalogue of books at the library encompasses new books, a rare book collection, past exams and readings online, and a digital repository.[26]
Students of the JD program are involved in preparing and publishing theMelbourne University Law Review, a triannuallaw journal covering all areas oflaw. It is one of two student-run law journals at theUniversity of Melbourne. Students who have completed at least one semester of law are eligible to apply for membership of theeditorial board. Applicants are assessed on the basis of their performance in a practical exercise, academic aptitude, proofreading skills, editing skills and enthusiasm. The 2022editors-in-chief are Daniel Beratis, Danielle Feng and Deylan Kilic-Aidani.[27]
Occasionally, the journal produces a symposium issue devoted to a particular aspect of law. Past symposium issues have focused on the centenary of thefederation of Australia, contemporaryhuman rights in Australia, andtort law. The Review's alumni include two High Court Justices, three Solicitors-General, five Federal Court judges and at least six Supreme Court judges.
The Australian Journal of Labour Law is a triannual peer-reviewed law journal that was established in 1968. It is published byLexisNexis in collaboration with the Centre For Employment and Labour Relations Law within Melbourne Law School. It coversAustralian labour law. Theeditors-in-chief are Andrew Stewart of theUniversity of Adelaide, John Howe of theUniversity of Melbourne, and Shae McCrystal of theUniversity of Sydney. The journal is abstracted and indexed inEBSCO databases.[28]
The Melbourne Journal of International Law ('MJIL') is a biannual peer-reviewed law review published by Melbourne Law School covering all areas of public and privateinternational law. It was established in 2000.MJIL is edited and managed by an editorial board of around 70 Melbourne Law School studentsl,[29] and overseen by an advisory board. The 2022 Editors are Matthew Carlei, Tegan Evans and Nicholas Hui.
Additional journals published by Melbourne Law School include theAustralian Journal of Asian Law (in conjunction with theAustralian National University and theUniversity of Washington), andMedia and Arts Law Review. Melbourne Law School publishes theAustralian Guide to Legal Citation, the most widely followed authority for legal citation formats in Australia.[30] Melbourne Law School students also produce a newspaper,De Minimis, and a magazine, "Purely Dicta".[31]
Melbourne Law School has been consistently ranked as the top law school in Australia.[32] Melbourne Law School has been consistently ranked among the top law schools in the world.
2013 | 2014 | 2015 | 2016 | 2017 | 2018 | 2019 | 2020 | 2021 | 2022 | 2023 | 2024 | |
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QS Ranking by Subject (Law)[33] | 5th | 8th | 8th | 8th | 11th | 8th | 6th | 10th | 11th | 12th | 11th | 10th |
T.H.E. Ranking by Subject (Law)[34] | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | 7th | 10th | 12th | 11th | 5th | 7th | 8th |
Several student organisations are associated with Melbourne Law School.
The Melbourne University Law Students' Society represents all law students at the Melbourne Law School. The society was originally known as the Law Clerk's Society. Unlike today, members used to comprise primarily of students working as an articled clerk in a law firm.[4]: 164–165 By the 1950s, most members of the society were fulltime students and became based on campus. Today the society is a student club and consists of approximately one hundred students who on a volunteer basis deliver programs and events.[35] Its president is Sabrina Liang.
The Global Law Students Association (GLSA), which focuses on international legal issues, careers and provides additional support forinternational students at Melbourne Law School.[36]
The Melbourne China Law Society, facilitates the comparative study ofChinese,Hong Kong andAustralian law, as well as providingMandarin language training to Melbourne Law School students.[37]
The Melbourne Law Masters Student Association (MLMSA) represents the collective interests of all MLM (Melbourne Law Masters) students within Melbourne Law School.[38]
Below is a list of the deans of Melbourne Law School from 1873 to the present:
Alfred Deakin, the 2ndprime minister of Australia, SirRobert Menzies, the 12th prime minister of Australia,Harold Holt, the 17th prime minister of Australia, andJulia Gillard, the 27th prime minister of Australia, all graduated from Melbourne Law School. Three governors-general and at least 13 attorneys-general have also graduated from Melbourne Law School, includingGareth Evans,Nicola Roxon andMark Dreyfus.
Foreign politicians who attended Melbourne Law School includeNeri Javier Colmenares, a member of the House of Representatives of the Philippines,Adnan Buyung Nasution, member of the Presidential Advisory Council of the Republic of Indonesia and DameMeg Taylor, former ambassador of Papua New Guinea to the United States and formersecretary general of the Pacific Islands Forum Secretariat
Four Melbourne Law School graduates have served asChief Justice of Australia. This number includes SirOwen Dixon, one of Australia's most eminent jurists,[42] and SirIsaac Isaacs, the first Jewish chief justice.Geoffrey Nettle, a current justice of the High Court of Australia, graduated from Melbourne Law School. In addition, two Melbourne Law School graduates have served on theInternational Court of Justice:Hsu Mo andHilary Charlesworth.
Francis Gurry, the director general of the World Intellectual Property Organization,Gillian Triggs, the president of the Australian Human Rights Commission, andSamuel Pisar, the UNESCO special envoy for Holocaust education, all graduated from Melbourne Law School.
Melbourne Law School graduates in the business world includeJames P. Gorman, chairman and CEO ofMorgan Stanley. Renowned lawyer,Leon Zwier, graduated from Melbourne Law School. Legal academics who graduated from Melbourne Law School include SirDavid Derham, the founding dean ofMonash Law School,Greg Craven, the vice-chancellor of theAustralian Catholic University, and SirJohn Monash, a vice-chancellor of the University of Melbourne and decoratedWorld War I general.
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