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Find a researcher

Find your prospective supervisor, research project or research group, collaborator or expert by searching UNSW Sydney Researcher Profiles. Use keywords to view their research interests, publications and areas of expertise.

Ms Madeline Gleeson

Faculty: Law & Justice
Fields of Research (FoR): Public international law, Migration, asylum and refugee law, International humanitarian and human rights law
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Madeline Gleeson is a lawyer and Senior Research Fellow at the Andrew & Renata Kaldor Centre for International Refugee Law at UNSW Sydney, where she directs the Offshore Processing and Regional
Ms Helen Gibbon

Faculty: Law & Justice
Fields of Research (FoR): Criminal law, Legal education

Helen has taught in the fields of Criminology and Criminal Law since 2001, and at UNSW Law & Justice since 2010. She is the Director of Undergraduate Studies (LLB).
Professor Theunis Robert Roux

Faculty: Law & Justice
Fields of Research (FoR): International and comparative law, Public law, Law and society and socio-legal research
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Professor of Law at the University of New South Wales.  Before relocating to Australia in January 2009, he was (for four years) the founding director of the South African Institute for Advance
Dr Jessica Hudson

Faculty: Law & Justice
Fields of Research (FoR): Private law and civil obligations, Commercial law, Legal systems

Dr Jessica Hudson is an Associate Professor and researches and teaches
Dr Daniel Paul McLoughlin

Faculty: Law & Justice

Daniel is a Senior Lecturer in the Faculty of Law at the University of New South Wales.
Ms Genna Churches

Faculty: Law & Justice

Genna Churches is a PhD candidate at UNSW Law; the title of her thesis is ‘The Evolution of Metadata Regulation in Australia: From Envelopes and Letters to URLs and Web Browsing’.  The focus o
Complementary protection


'Complementary protection' describes the obligations that States have under international human rights law to protect people who are at risk of serious human rights violations if removed, but who do not qualify as ‘refugees’ under the 1951 Refugee Convention.