Sydney Law School Alumni
In its over 150-year history, the Sydney Law School has produced a prominent group of alumni. The following is a list of some of these prominent alumni.
Courts and tribunals
International Court of Justice
- Sir Percy Spender: International Court of Justice judge 1958–1964, President 1964–1967
- Sir Garfield Barwick ad hoc judge 1973–1974
High Court of Australia
- Chief Justices of the High Court of Australia (in chronological order):
- Sir Samuel Griffith
- Sir Garfield Barwick
- Sir Anthony Mason
- Murray Gleeson
- Puisne Justices of the High Court (in chronological order):
- Sir Edmund Barton
- Richard O'Connor
- Albert Piddington
- Sir George Rich
- Dr. H. V. Evatt
- Sir Edward McTiernan
- Sir Dudley Williams
- Sir Frank Kitto
- Sir Alan Taylor
- Sir Victor Windeyer
- Sir Cyril Walsh
- Sir Kenneth Jacobs
- Lionel Murphy
- Sir William Deane
- Mary Gaudron
- Michael Kirby
- William Gummow
- Dyson Heydon
- Susan Crennan
- Virginia Bell
As of 2014, the University of Sydney has produced 24 out of 50 Justices of the High Court of Australia.[1]
Supreme Court of New South Wales
Chief Justices of the NSW Supreme Court:
- Tom Bathurst (2011–)
- James Spigelman (2001–2009)
- Murray Gleeson (1988–1998)
- Sir Laurence Whistler Street (1974–1988)
- Sir John Kerr (1972–1974)
- Sir Leslie James Herron (1962–1972)
- Dr. H. V. Evatt (1960–1962)
- Sir Kenneth Whistler Street (1950–1960)
- Sir Frederick Richard Jordan (1934–1949)
- Sir Philip Whistler Street (1925–1933)
- Sir William Portus Cullen (1910–1925)
Presidents of the NSW Court of Appeal
- Margaret Beazley (2013–)
- James Allsop (2008–2013)
- Sir Kenneth Jacobs (1972–1974)
- Sir Gordon Wallace, first President of the Court of Appeal (1966–1970)
Judges of the NSW Court of Appeal:
- Carolyn Simpson (2015–)
- Mark Leeming (2013–)
- Arthur Emmett (2013–)
- Clifton Hoeben (2012–)
- Peter Young AO (2009–2012)
- Julie Ward (2008–)
- Robert Macfarlan (2008–)
- Peter McClellan, Judge of Appeal (2005–); Chief Judge in Equity (1986–2001)
- Ruth McColl AO (2003–)
- Kim Santow (2002–2007)
In 1999 legal history was made when Justices Virginia Bell, Margaret Beazley and Carolyn Simpson sat together, forming the first all-female bench in an Australian court. According to the Women Lawyers Association of NSW, there had never been an all-female bench in England or New Zealand.[2]
Judges of the NSW Supreme Court:
- Peter Garling (2010–)
- Paul Le Gay Brereton AM RFD (2005–)
- Derek Price (2006–)
- Clifton Hoeben (2004–2012)
- Carolyn Simpson (1994–2015)
- Kim Santow (1993–2002)
- Peter Young AO (1985–2001)
Federal Court of Australia
- James Allsop, Chief Justice of the Federal Court of Australia (4 March 2013–Present)
- Peter Jacobson (17 June 2002)
- Nye Perram (8 August 2008)
- Jayne Jagot (3 September 2008)
- Lindsay Foster (4 September 2008)
- David Yates (30 November 2009)
- Michael Wigney[3] (9 September 2013)
- Jacqueline Gleeson[4] (15 April 2014)
- Arthur Emmett (1997–2013)
Supreme Court of Western Australia
- Graeme Murphy (3 August 2010)
Solicitors General of Australia
- Sir Robert Garran (1916–1932)
- Sir Anthony Mason (1964–1969)
- Bob Ellicott (1969–1973)
- Sir Maurice Byers (1973–1983)
- David Bennett (barrister) (1998–2008)
- Justin Gleeson (2013–Present)
Other legal professionals
- Antonia Apps, Assistant United States Attorney in the Southern District of New York
- Reg Blanch, Chief Judge of NSW District Court
- Robert Bromwich SC, current Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions
- Marie Beuzeville Byles, the first woman to practise as a lawyer in NSW
- Nicholas Cowdery QC, former NSW Director of Public Prosecutions (1994–2011)
- Ada Emily Evans, the first woman in Australia to graduate with an LL.B. (but not permitted to practise)
- Elizabeth Evatt, former Chief Justice of the Family Court of Australia and first Australian to be appointed to the United Nations Human Rights Committee
- Kate O'Regan, Justice of the Constitutional Court of South Africa from 1994 to 2009
- David Re, Trial Chamber President for the Special Tribunal for Lebanon
- Geoffrey Robertson QC, former President of the Special Court for Sierra Leone, human rights lawyer, author and joint head of Doughty Street Chambers
- Kim Santow, Justice of Appeal in the New South Wales Supreme Court and former Chancellor of the University of Sydney (2001–2007)
- Mark Tedeschi QC, Senior Crown Prosecutor for New South Wales
- Lucy Turnbull, lawyer and former Lord Mayor of Sydney
- Bret Walker SC, leading silk and former President of the Law Council of Australia
Politics
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Business
- Malcolm Turnbull, businessman, politician and Prime Minister
- James Wolfensohn, former President of the World Bank Group
- Rene Rivkin, entrepreneur
- Allan Moss, banker
- Robert Rankin, Head of Corporate Finance and Co-head of Corporate Banking and Securities, Deutsche Bank
- Larry Kwok, Managing Partner of Asia Strategy and Markets, King & Wood Mallesons
- Jayne Huckerby, Director, International Human Rights Clinic, Duke Law School
- John Coates (sports administrator), Vice-President, International Olympic Committee
- Stephen Healy, President, Tennis Australia
- David Gallop, Chief Executive, Football Federation Australia
Academia
Academics
- Peter Cane
- William Gummow
- Dyson Heydon
- Sarah Joseph
- Grant Lamond
- Andrew Leigh
- Ben Saul
- Elisabeth Peden
- John Carter
- Sheelagh McCracken
Rhodes scholars
24 Rhodes scholars including:[5]
- Vincent John Flynn (1927)
- David Hargraves Hodgson (1962)
- Geoffrey Robertson (1970)
- Malcolm Turnbull (1978)
- Tony Abbott (1981)
Vinerian Scholars
- Peter Cane[6][7] (1976), Magdalen College, Oxford
- Andrew Bell[8] (1993), Magdalen College, Oxford
- Naomi Oreb[9] (2012), Magdalen College, Oxford
Arts, media, and entertainment
- Janet Albrechtsen, columnist
- Julia Leigh, writer and film director
- Chas Licciardello, comedian
- David Marr, writer
- Julian Morrow, comedian
- Andrew O'Keefe, entertainer
- Lisa Pryor, columnist
- Craig Reucassel, comedian
- Peter Weir, film director
Sport
- Nick Farr-Jones, Former Wallabies captain
References
- ↑ 17 of the 24 justices studied for law degrees at the University of Sydney; the remainder studied at the University at a time before the Sydney Law School offered a full programme of legal study.
- ↑ http://web.archive.org/web/20080627133421/http://www.usyd.edu.au/about/publication/gazette/oct99/pub/media_watch.pdf
- ↑ "News | The University of Sydney". sydney.edu.au. Retrieved 2016-12-04.
- ↑ http://www.lawyersweekly.com.au/wig-chamber/news/new-federal-court-judge-a-chip-off-the-old-block
- ↑ "Sydney Law School: Rhodes Scholars 1904-2013". Sydney Law School.
- ↑ "Professor Peter Cane | Squire Law Library". squire.law.cam.ac.uk. Retrieved 2016-12-04.
- ↑ "Institute of Advanced Study : Professor Peter Cane - Durham University". dur.ac.uk. Retrieved 2016-12-04.
- ↑ "Eleven Wentworth | Eleven Wentworth". elevenwentworth.com.au. Retrieved 2016-12-04.
- ↑ "News | The University of Sydney". sydney.edu.au. Retrieved 2016-12-04.
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