

Law Report
ABC Australia
From courtroom dramas to miscarriages of justice, to how the law affects you — and so much more. The Law Report is your accessible guide to the big legal stories unfolding in Australia and across the world.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Feb 15, 2022 • 29min
High Court rulings clarify contract worker status
The High Court has delivered two judgments that help clarify the legal distinction between the status of a contract worker and a employee, with potential long-term implications across Australian workplaces. Also in the program, a neighbourhood dispute that grew 'out of all proportion' ends in the New South Wales Supreme Court.

Feb 8, 2022 • 29min
Are Australia's political donation laws fit for purpose?
The Australian Electoral Commission has revealed that 10 donors account for a quarter of donations made to the country's political parties in the 2020-21 financial year. According to the Commission, the source of one third of all political income remains undisclosed. What does the data reveal and what does it hide? And what does it say about the rules governing political donations?

Feb 1, 2022 • 29min
When does misrepresenting professional experience become a criminal offence?
When does inflating professional skills and experience cross a line to become a criminal offence?

Jan 25, 2022 • 29min
Deporting Djokovic, and Catholic diocese found vicariously liable in historical child sex abuse case
The Federal Government's move to deport Serbian tennis player Novak Djokovic from Australia has highlighted the scope of discretionary powers held by the immigration minister. And the Supreme Court of Victoria sets a legal precedent in what is believed to be the first ruling to find a Catholic diocese in Australia 'vicariously liable' for child sexual abuse committed by a priest decades ago.

Jan 18, 2022 • 29min
Crime and justice in the Torres Strait, and Cape York’s Licensing Muster program
According to a study which explores how the Torres Strait's unique culture, geography and colonial experience has shaped the current crime and justice landscape, property crime in the region is very low. And the innovative Licensing Muster Project is helping Indigenous people living at the top of Cape York obtain birth certificates which are required when applying for a drivers licence.

Jan 11, 2022 • 29min
Inside Thomas Embling Hospital, a forensic health facility
For the first time a journalist is allowed to record in the Thomas Embling Hospital, Melbourne's Forensic healthcare facility. Meet therapists, the psychiatrist in charge and some of the patients who have committed a serious crime but are deemed not responsible for their actions due to mental illness.

Jan 4, 2022 • 29min
Court rules couples can conspire, and how brain implants might transform criminal law
The High Court of Australia rules that a married couple can conspire to commit a crime. Also, the challenges posed by emerging neurotechnologies.

Dec 28, 2021 • 29min
How itchy underpants created Australia's consumer laws
If a consumer is injured by a faulty product, they can sue the manufacturer. In Australia, The law of Negligence or Torts forms a fundamental building block of our legal system.As reporter Carly Godden discovers, these laws owe much of their origins to a case from the 1930's involving a pair of woollen long johns.

Dec 21, 2021 • 29min
'Squatters' rights', and UK health laws
The Law Report revisits a New South Wales Supreme Court ruling against a retirement village developer that claimed ‘squatters' rights’, or adverse possession, over a Sydney property. And two court decisions highlight important issues in Britain's health laws.

Dec 14, 2021 • 29min
US trademark dispute threatens ugg boot business, and deportation fears for returned prison escapee
A Sydney ugg boot maker says his 40-year-old business is at risk of bankruptcy following a trademark dispute in the United States courts. And can Australia deport a prison escapee, who surrendered after 30 years on the run, to a country that no longer exists?


