Australian Law Students' Association

The Australian Law Students' Association
Public, limited by guarantee
Founded 1979
Website www.alsa.net.au

The Australian Law Students' Association (ALSA) is the peak representative body of law students from Australia. The ALSA facilitates communication between the law student societies of most Australian law schools; it acts as a conduit for intervarsity dialogue and intercourse; it represents students to government, universities and the public; it authors numerous educational and careers publications; and it hosts an annual conference and two additional council meetings each year.

ALSA is a not-for-profit association run by law students elected annually for the benefit of law students nationally. ALSA's membership comprises all law students in Australia and their universities' law student societies, with the exception of the Sydney University Law Society.[1] Representation to ALSA is facilitated by these societies, whose delegates sit on the ALSA National Council. The organisation's functions are overseen by an Executive and Committee. The ALSA Executive and Committee (ALSA Main) should not be confused with the ALSA Conference, which is run by a separate body (from the host university) and which is supported by ALSA Main.

Members

All law student societies are members of ALSA, with the exception of the Sydney University Law Society, which withdrew from the association in August 2014.[1]

Presidents

Presidents of the Association are elected by the ALSA Council, with each Member university exercising two votes each. The President's term runs from 1 August to 31 July each year. Past Presidents have come from a variety of universities:

Year Elected Name University
1978 Terence Connolly University of Adelaide
1979 unknown unknown
1980 Michael Lishman University of Western Australia
1981 Alistair Wyvill University of Queensland
1982 Cecilia Tarrant University of Auckland
1983 John Richardson University of Sydney
1984 Stewart Diamond Monash University
1985 Elizabeth Vardon Australian National University
1986 Stuart Shepherd University of Western Australia
1987 Fiona McLeod University of Melbourne
1988 Janet McDonald University of Adelaide
1989 Lachlan Carter University of Melbourne
1990 Gareth Sage University of Sydney
1991 Brad Husband University of Melbourne
1992 Brad Husband University of Melbourne
1993 Penny Moore Murdoch University
1994 Simone Burford Macquarie University
1995 Amber Cerny Macquarie University
1996 Emanouel Gaganis Flinders University
1997 Geraldine Chin Australian National University
1998 Jesse Clarke University of Sydney
1999 Georgia King-Siem University of Tasmania
2000 Jason Roufogalis Macquarie University
2001 Joanna Davidson University of New South Wales
2002 Daniel Murnane University of Canberra
2003 Ivan Rubinstein Deakin University
2004 Elizabeth Hundt University of Technology Sydney
2005 Katrina Dunn Murdoch University
2006 Faraz Maghami University of Western Sydney
2007 Paul Gordon Flinders University
2008 Verity Doyle University of Queensland
2009 Jonathan Augustus University of Melbourne
2010 Matthew Floro University of Queensland
2011 Geoffrey Winters University of Sydney
2012 Corinne O'Sullivan Macquarie University
2013 Charlotte Thomas University of Adelaide
2014 Alistair Booth Macquarie University
2015 Paul Melican Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology
2016 Dan Trevanion Australian National University

The University of Melbourne and Macquarie University have supplied the most number of ALSA Presidents - both five times since 1978. Twenty one ALSA Presidents have been male, while sixteen have been female.

ALSA Annual Conferences

Traditionally an annual conference is held each year by ALSA, with council, general and competing delegates attending from the majority of Australia's law schools. Competitors are also invited from New Zealand's five law schools, and from the National University of Singapore. The conference allows students to compete against fellow member universities in mooting, negotiation, witness examination, paper presentation and client interviewing. Each competition allows the student to apply their legal training, skills and knowledge in a practical sense.

Bidding rights to host the conference are determined on the basis of a two-tiered classification system. ALSA-affiliated Universities are first divided into two groups by geography: Eastern (made up of Universities in Queensland, NSW, ACT and Victoria) and Other (made up of Universities in South Australia, Northern Territory, Western Australia and Tasmania). This makes up the first tier, with hosting rights rotating in a three-yearly cycle between Eastern, Eastern and Other.

Within each tier is the second tier, which divides Universities further into geographical classifications as follows:

Eastern Other
Victoria South Australia
NSW-Regional & ACT Northern Territory
Queensland Western Australia
NSW-Sydney Tasmania

Therefore, after the first tier is confirmed for any given year, the right to make a bid will fall on the next regional classification along, e.g. if it is an Eastern year and the last Eastern bid was from Victoria, then the right to bid will fall on NSW-Regional & ACT. If no University in the region which has the bidding rights that year makes a bid to host the conference, the next region along in that group will have the right to make a bid.

NSW-Sydney did not bid for the 2010 conference. The opportunity to bid therefore passed to South Australia as the bidder next in line. South Australia's decision to bid for 2010 means that it will not be eligible to bid for 2011 (for which it was originally scheduled to bid), and the bidding rights for 2011 will pass to Eastern (Victoria).

Year Location Tier 1 Region Tier 2 Regional classification Hosting universities
2005 Perth Other Western Australia Joint hosts: University of Western Australia, Murdoch University and University of Notre Dame Australia
2006 Melbourne Eastern Victoria Joint hosts: University of Melbourne, Deakin University, Monash University and La Trobe University
2007 Canberra Eastern NSW-Regional & ACT Joint hosts: Australian National University and University of Canberra
2008 Hobart Other Tasmania Host: University of Tasmania
2009 Brisbane Eastern Queensland Joint hosts: Griffith University - Nathan and Queensland University of Technology
2010 Adelaide Other South Australia Joint hosts: Flinders University, University of Adelaide, and University of South Australia
2011 Sydney Eastern New South Wales University of New South Wales
2012 Melbourne Eastern Victoria Joint hosts: Monash University, University of Melbourne, La Trobe University, Deakin University, Victoria University, and RMIT University
2013 Perth Other Western Australia Host: University of Western Australia
2014 Brisbane Eastern Queensland Joint hosts: University of Queensland and Queensland University of Technology
2015 Sydney Eastern New South Wales Host: University of Sydney, although the University of Sydney severed its affiliation with ALSA, leaving the organisation of the conference to other (mainly UNSW) law students
2016 Hobart Tasmania Host: University of Tasmania
2017 Canberra Eastern ACT Host:

Bids for the opportunity to host the annual conference are heard two years in advance at the ALSA July Conference itself. If no bid is presented (as happened at the 2010 Conference in Adelaide), the bid process continues to the October Council meeting, until a bid is put forth.

ALSA Champions

Melbourne University has won the ALSA Championship Moot more than any other university: on 7 occasions. UNSW has won ALSA Witness Examination more than any other university: on 8 occasions. Macquarie has won ALSA Negotiation more than any other university: on 3 occasions. Auckland has won ALSA Client Interviewing more than any other university: on 3 occasions. UQ has won the ALSA Red Cross IHL Moot more than any other university: on 4 occasions. UWA and Murdoch have both won ALSA Paper Presentation more than any other university: on 3 occasions.

Year Championship Moot Witness Examination Negotiation Client Interviewing IHL Moot Paper Presentation
Champion Runner-Up Champion Runner-Up Champion Runner-Up Champion Runner-Up Champion Runner-Up Champion
2016[2] Major Zhang, Josiah Fajardo, Lachlan Peake (UNSW) Jesse Tizard, Amelia Watson (Waikato) Chris Bigwood (Tasmania) John Whitecombe (Canterbury) Zachary Katene, Jarom Murphy (Waikato) Billy Clements, Robert Cooper (Canterbury) Charlie Austin, Annabelle Kent (ANU) Roxane Read, Caragh Morgan (Griffith) Lara Sveinsson, Martin Campbell (Bond) Becky Bunting, Sean Bowes (UNSW) Jessica Downing-Ide (UQ)
2015 Becky Bunting, George Pasas, Christopher Chiam (UNSW)
See video
Audrey Driscoll, George Holgate, Daryl Hui (Tasmania) Megan Paterson (Otago)
See video
Roshana Ching (Auckland) Emma Nichelsen, Andrew Ciantar (UWS)
See video
Floyd Bakewell, Taylor Rundell (Adelaide) Andrew Grant, Tiaan Nelson (Auckland) Nicola Amys, Stephanie Fehon (Macquarie) Ryan Sheldrake, Liam MacAndrews (QUT)
See video
Antoine Najjarin, Ashleigh Best (UTS) Finian Cullity (UQ)
2014 Eoin Coffey, Rupert Holden (Bond)[3] Lachlan Campbell, Michael Maynard, Elizabeth Stanley (UQ) Marcus Playle (Auckland)[4] Hannah Panizzutti (UWS) Robert Leonard, Rachael Young (Bond) Hamish Saunders, Josh Baxter (Auckland) Hayley Gordon, Simon Hill (Sydney)[5] Hayden Smith, Joseph Bergin (AUT)[6] Alice Zhou, Amelia Dale (Sydney)[7] Marieanne Golubinsky, Paul Weaver (Griffith, Gold Coast)[8] Connor McBain (Bond)
2013 John Eldridge, Rebecca McEwen, Alice Wharldall (Adelaide) Daniel Bullock, Katrina Hogan, Joan Williams (Newcastle) Penelope Owen (Tasmania) Josh McGeeChan (UQ) Andrew Holland, Sean Maskill (Canterbury) Jonathan Russell, Alex ten Hove (Waikato) Philip Arnold, Luke Sizer (Auckland) James Johnston, Bianca Kabel (UQ) Mark Giddings, Tomas Macura (Adelaide) Kristy Riley, David Tan (Tasmania) Kritika Rampal (UWS)
2012 Campbell Herbert, Alexandra Sinclair, David Smith (VU Wellington) William Cheyne, Alec Dawson (Otago) Matthew Christey (UniSA) Nicholas Ferrari (Macquarie) George Lukic, Rachel Wang (Flinders) Charles Bruce, Benjamin Bishop (Adelaide) Elisabeth Perham, Adèle Taylor (VU Wellington) Tenelle May, Nathan Docker (Griffith, Gold Coast)[9] Caroline Compton, Shiang Ye (ANU) Catherine Drummond, Ben Taylor (UQ) Emily Burke (UNSW)
2011 Louis Chambers, Alice Osman, Alec Dawson (Otago) David Bullock, Kristina Bunting, Campbell Herbert (VU Wellington) Peter Syddall (Auckland) Kate Lawson-Bradshaw (Otago) Reece Corbett-Wilkins, Nicholas Ferrari (Macquarie) Dan Threlfall, Regan Nathan (UNSW) Rob Clarke, Alex Boock (Otago) Leo Murray, Sheriden Nelson (Newcastle) Georgia Boyce, Eamonn Kelly (Melbourne) Bridget Dunne, Jesse Murphy (Tasmania)[10] Jemma Arman (Flinders)
2010 Ayowande McCunn, Mona Mbogua, Mary Huang (Macquarie) Louis Chambers, Alice Osman (Otago) Julian Law (Melbourne) Edward Einfeld (UTS) Alison Dunn, Christopher Jenkins (Auckland) Ben Gilbert, Andy Cameron (Waikato)[11] Reece Corbett-Wilkins, Nicholas Ferrari (Macquarie) Georgina Box, Ashleigh Armitage (Bond) Kendra Fouracre, David Bomball (ANU) Nik Barron, Zarah Burgess (UWA) David Herbert (Murdoch)
2009 Hannah Canham, Georgia Goldsworthy, Rachael White (Adelaide)[12] Sam Hiebendaal, Desley Horton, Tom Price (Auckland) Yogesh Patel (VU Wellington) Brenton Pollard (Melbourne) David Robertson, Reuben Ray (Sydney) Roshni Kaur, Mitch Singh (Otago) Guy Carter, Julia Whitehead (Canterbury) Adam Edwards, Jordan Boyd (VU Wellington)[13] Alice Zheng, Matthew Kalyk (Sydney) Jessica Rusden (Murdoch)
2008 Jonathan Adamopoulos, Matthew Carr, Tim McGrath (UWS) (VU Wellington) Marcus Agnew (UNSW) Jimmy Bai (ANU) (Flinders) Emily Keys, Jason Myers (Notre Dame (Fremantle)) (UQ) (Griffith, Nathan) Varin Singh, Benedict Coxon (Adelaide) Sebastian Hartford-Davis, Patrick Loffel (Macquarie) (UWA)
2007 Sebastian Hartford-Davis, Tom O'Brien, Patrick Mahoney (Macquarie) Brent Michael, Derek Wong, Amanda Foong (UNSW) Vanathi Subramaniam (NU Singapore) Scott Leith (Auckland) (Macquarie) (Monash) (Notre Dame (Fremantle)) Zi-Yang Lim, Joe Liu (UNSW) (Monash) (Adelaide) Louise Dargan (Macquarie)
2006 (Auckland) (ANU) Patrick Loffel (Macquarie) Cameron Forsaith (UQ) Laura Grant, Rebecca James (UQ) (Tasmania) (Waikato) (Macquarie) (Sydney) Dario Morosini, Angus O'Brien (UQ) (Macquarie)
2005 Angus Christophersen, Cameron Nolan (Melbourne) Colin Fife, James Shaerf, Justin Wall (Canterbury)[14] Clara Bowman (Murdoch) Shashi Samar (Melbourne) Stuart Dullard, William Marshall (Macquarie) Husar, Searing (Griffith, Gold Coast) Thompson, Watt (VU Wellington) Leslie, Martin (Otago) Del Mar, McRae (UQ) Rankine, Zerial (Sydney) David Jenaway (Murdoch)
2004 J Wilson, I Hikaka, G Anderson (Auckland) JD Birch, GD Kuehne, CK Pearce (UWA) Amy Shakespeare (Canterbury) F Geiringler, S Lee (VU Wellington) Andrew VM Lodder (UWA)
2003 Andrew VM Lodder, Benjamin J Spagnolo, Corey J Steel (UWA) Gareth Tilley, ? (Sydney) Rossi Kotsis (UWS) Phillip Cornege (VU Wellington) (Monash) (Auckland) (Macquarie) (UQ)
2002 Sarah d’Oliveyra, Paul Bernath (Melbourne) Irene Sekler, Janine Dennis, Nicola McGarrity (Macquarie) Dorothy Thresher (Waikato) Kirsty Marshall, Catherine Loft (Canterbury) (Wollongong) (UQ) (UQ)
2001 Dan Feldman, Chris Young (Monash) (UWA) Nicholas Wood (ANU) (Tasmania) (UQ)
2000 B Bushenhofen, L Carroll, K Foley (UWA) Nathan Dawson (Murdoch) The ALSA Red Cross IHL Moot began in 2001.
1999 M O'Sullivan, Sanya Reid-Smith, Jackson Lam (Monash) Brennan, ? (UQ) Amanda Ferraro (Monash) Jonathon Gardener (Melbourne) Kate Beattie, Charlie Pickering (Monash) (Auckland) Geraldine Chin (ANU)
1998 C Podagiel, K MacKenzie, G Nikodem (QUT) Sandy Mak (UNSW) (Monash)
1997 J Mossop, D Kalderimis, C Holland (VU Wellington) David McLure SC (QUT)
1996 S Bogan, D Gal, G Rich (Macquarie) David McLure SC (QUT) Neil Murray (UNSW)
1995 A Baillie, D Chakravarti, D Crocker (Adelaide) Robert Bathurst (Murdoch)
1994 [erased from trophy] Jeremy Philips (UNSW) Katrina Morris (?)
1993 Carolyn Evans, Stephen Donaghue, Fiona Forsyth (Melbourne) Peter S Braham SC (UNSW) Jeremy Kirk SC (ANU) (Wollongong)
1992 A Horne, J Palmer, J Riddell (Otago) [erased from trophy] Michael A Jenkin (UWA) Jonathon P Moore (Monash) Justin Mannolini (UWA)
1991 Charles Lumsden (Tasmania)
1990 Jennifer Hill, Ann-Marie Devereaux, Janine Pritchard (ANU) Penelope Wines, Simon Evans, ?? (Sydney) Annabel Butler (ANU)
1989 AF Maniam, A Kam, A Ali (NU Singapore) Richard Burton (Tasmania)
1988 K Smark, K Andronos, C Webster (Sydney) Paul D Archer (UWA) (UNSW)
1987 D Williams, J Roskam, J Davis (Melbourne) Matthew Howard (UWA)
1986 Ashley Black,[15] David Garnsey, N Guy (Sydney) Joint winners: Bruce Burgess (Sydney), Michael Rackemann (UQ)
1985 A Hoy, P Laskaris, I Latham (ANU) François Kunc SC (Sydney)
1984 C Beale, S Pemberton, M Weelahan (Melbourne) Michael Rose (UNSW)
1983 P Mills, J Forest, J Sullivan (UQ) Jean-Paul Rabin (UNSW)
1982 A Williamson, M Sheddon, M Pattison (Melbourne) Garry S Charny (UNSW)
1981 M Kingston, R Burnett, A Todd (Melbourne) Emmanuel Paneras (UNSW)
1980 MC Fabian, JHA Jacobs, TP Coleman (Sydney) ALSA Witness Examination began in 1981.
1979 Peter CS van Haltem, Melanie Sloss (UWA)
1978 Stuart Littlemore, J Santelle (UNSW)
1977 P Allen, T Connolly (Adelaide)
1976 T Jackson, W Sarre (Adelaide)

2007 Conference

The 2007 ALSA conference was held in Canberra from 2–8 July 2007, jointly hosted by Australian National University and the University of Canberra and sponsored by Mallesons Stephen Jaques. The Corrs Chambers Westgarth opening night gala ball was held in the Great Hall of the Australian Parliament and the closing night dinner at the National Museum of Australia. The mid-week sponsors' cocktail function was held at the Australian War Memorial. All functions catering was contracted out to the Park Hyatt Canberra.

In the Grand Finals:

ALSA Mooting: Before a four-judge panel in the Supreme Court of the ACT, Macquarie University was unanimously declared the winner against University of New South Wales

Witness examination: National University of Singapore's Vanathi Subramaniam beat the University of Auckland's Scott Leith before Justice Drumgold in the Federal Court of the ACT.

Negotiation: Macquarie University beat Monash University in the Federal Court of the ACT.

Client interviewing: Notre Dame University (WA) defeated the University of New South Wales in a 2-1 decision by the three-judge panel.

IHL Mooting: Monash University was unanimously declared the winner by a three-judge panel in the ACT Supreme Court, beating University of Adelaide.

Paper Presentation: Making it three trophies to take back to Ryde, this was won by Macquarie University.

Kirby Cup: The Cup was taken out by Australian National University (ACT) who defeated Murdoch University (WA) and the University of Sydney (NSW)

2008 Conference

The 2008 ALSA conference was held in Hobart from 7–13 July 2008, hosted by the University of Tasmania. The opening night gala ball was held at the Sandy Bay Wrest Point complex, also the designated accommodation provider for delegates. For the first time, in addition to the traditional themed party nights and the mid-week sponsor's cocktail function, Hobart 2008 introduced Breakfast With the Governor, where delegates were offered the opportunity to dine with Tasmanian Governor Peter Underwood, a former Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Tasmania.

ALSA Moot: The University of Western Sydney was declared the winner of the competition before Sir Anthony Mason (former Justice of the High Court of Australia).

Witness Examination: Marcus Agnew from the University of New South Wales defeated Jimmy Bai from the Australian National University before Justice Blow (Supreme Court of Tasmania) Tim Ellis SC (Tasmanian DPP), and Brian Morgan (barrister).

IHL Moot: The winner was the University of Adelaide, defeating Macquarie University in a replay of the 2007 Grand Final.

2009 Conference

The 2009 ALSA conference was held in Brisbane from 12–19 July 2009, jointly hosted by Queensland University of Technology and Griffith University (Nathan). For the first time, the conference schedule introduced a Rest Day in between the preliminary and knockout rounds of competitions, with the break not being announced until the evening of the Rest Day. This allowed all delegates to have a day off in between the preliminary and knockout phases of the competition.

ALSA Moot: The winner was University of Adelaide - Hannah Canham, Georgia Goldsworthy and Rachael White. Before a panel of judges including High Court of Australia Justice Susan Kiefel. Hannah Canham University of Adelaide was judged the best speaker of the competition.

IHL Moot: The winner was University of Sydney - Alice Zheng and Matthew Kalyk.

Witness Examination: The winner was Victoria University of Wellington - Yogesh Patel.

Client Interviewing: The winner was University of Canterbury - Guy Carter and Julia Whitehead

Negotiation: The winner was Sydney University - David Robertson and Reuben Ray; the runner-up was University of Otago - Roshni Kaur and Mitch Singh

Paper Presentation: The winner was Murdoch University - Jessica Rusden

Kirby Cup: The winner was University of New South Wales - Ella Kucharova and Rebecca Zaman

2010 Conference

The 2010 ALSA conference was held in Adelaide from 12–19 July 2010, jointly hosted by University of Adelaide, Flinders University and University of South Australia. The conference saw over 500 law students attend the Opening Gala Dinner, Cocktail Night, Themed Night, and Closing Gala Dinner. The national Law Competitions grand finals were held on Sunday 18 July in the Federal Court of Australia, Adelaide.

Mallesons Stephen Jaques ALSA Moot: The winner was Macquarie University - Ayowande McCunn, Mona Mbogua and Mary Huang. David Jordan of Adelaide University was awarded Best Speaker in the preliminary rounds.

Red Cross International IHL Moot: The winner was The Australian National University - Kendra Fouracre and David Bomball. Georgia Boyce from The University of Melbourne was awarded Best Speaker for the preliminary rounds of the competition.

Witness Examination: The winner was The University of Melbourne - Julian Law.

Client Interviewing: The winner was Macquarie University - Nicholas Ferrari and Reece Corbett-Wilkins.

Allens Arthur Robinson Negotiation Championship: The winner was University of Auckland - Alison Dunn and Christopher Jenkins.

Paper Presentation: The winner was Murdoch University - David Herbert.

2011 Conference

The 2011 ALSA Conference was held in Sydney from 8–15 July 2011, hosted by the University of New South Wales. The two premier sponsors of the Conference were the University of New South Wales and Clayton Utz.[16]

A Competitions Subcommittee was set up in late 2010 to reform the ALSA Competitions rules. The results of this process were announced in June 2011, including:

Other proposals, including the introduction of a power-pairing or Swiss system, were deferred to the medium and long term.

ALSA Moot: The winner was Otago University - Alice Osman and Louis Chambers. (Name) of (University) was awarded Best Speaker for the preliminary rounds of the competition.

Red Cross International IHL Moot: The winner was the University of Melbourne. Domenico Cucinotta of the University of Sydney was awarded Best Speaker for the preliminary rounds of the competition.

Witness Examination: The winner was Auckland University - Peter Syddall.

Client Interviewing: The winner was Otago University - Rob Clarke and Alex Boock.

Negotiation Championship: The winner was Macquarie University - Reece Corbett-Wilkins and Nicholas Ferrari.

Paper Presentation: The winner was Flinders University - Jemma Arman.

2012 Conference

The 2012 ALSA Conference was held in Melbourne.

2013 Conference

The 2013 ALSA Conference was held in Perth, hosted by the University of Western Australia.

References

External links

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