
Hosted by Nicole Abadee · ENGLISH

Nicole Abadee talks to Professor Gerry Simpson about his book "The Sentimental Life of International Law: Literature, Language and Longing in world politics." SHOW NOTES: Nicole Abadee Website: https://www.nicoleabadee.com.au Facebook: @booksbooksbookspodcast OR @nicole.abadee Twitter: @NicoleAbadee Instagram: @booksbooksbookspodcast OR @nicoleabadee University of Sydney Law School Website: https://www.sydney.edu.au/law/ Facebook: @sydneylawschool Twitter: @SydneyLawSchool Instagram: @sydneylawschool YouTube: @SydneyLawSchool Soundcloud: @sydneylawschool LinkedIn: The University of Sydney Law SchoolSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Associate Professor Ghena Krayem provides deep insights into her latest book, Understanding Sharia Processes – Women’s Experience of Family Disputes, explaining the difference between a religious and a civil law divorce and why an Islamic woman might want both, the different types of religious divorce, and the process for obtaining a religious divorce, considering recent improvements to make the process more female-friendly and suggesting further reforms. Fascinating. SHOW NOTES: Nicole Abadee Website: https://www.nicoleabadee.com.au Facebook: @booksbooksbookspodcast OR @nicole.abadee Twitter: @NicoleAbadee Instagram: @booksbooksbookspodcast OR @nicoleabadee University of Sydney Law School Website: https://www.sydney.edu.au/law/ Facebook: @sydneylawschool Twitter: @SydneyLawSchool Instagram: @sydneylawschool YouTube: @SydneyLawSchool Soundcloud: @sydneylawschool LinkedIn: The University of Sydney Law SchoolSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

This episode is a special presentation of the In Conversation Nicole Abadee did with award winning playwright and former human rights lawyer, Suzie Miller, for the Public Interest Advocacy Centre, about the importance and role of storytelling in social justice. SHOW NOTES: Nicole Abadee Website: https://www.nicoleabadee.com.au Facebook: @booksbooksbookspodcast OR @nicole.abadee Twitter: @NicoleAbadee Instagram: @booksbooksbookspodcast OR @nicoleabadee Suzie Miller Website: http://www.suziemillerwriter.com Public Interest Advocacy Centre: Website: https://piac.asn.au See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

In this episode of the Books, Books, Books Law School Series, Professor Svetiev provides an up-to-date account of the evolution of competition law enforcement in the European Union, arguing that recent developments may be explained by a model of experimentalist governance based on learning from difference and learning from experience. He considers the extent to which an experimentalist governance model is either feasible or desirable, with detailed reference to recent cases and developments. SHOW NOTES: Nicole Abadee Website: https://www.nicoleabadee.com.au Facebook: @booksbooksbookspodcast OR @nicole.abadee Twitter: @NicoleAbadee Instagram: @booksbooksbookspodcast OR @nicoleabadee University of Sydney Law School Website: https://www.sydney.edu.au/law/ Facebook: @sydneylawschool Twitter: @SydneyLawSchool Instagram: @sydneylawschool YouTube: @SydneyLawSchool Soundcloud: @sydneylawschool LinkedIn: The University of Sydney Law SchoolSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Nicole talks to the new editor of Griffith Review, Dr Carody Culver about Griffith Review 78, A Matter of Taste, which provides a feast of essays, memoir, reportage and fiction about what we eat and why. They discuss brilliant pieces by food writer Kate Gibbs (grand-daughter of Margaret Fulton) on the joys and future of cookbooks, historian Yves Rees on the milk wars and their origin, writer Laura Elvery on what happens when a food name is no longer appropriate and the backlash a name change can provoke (think Coon cheese) and the passion of Nornie Bero, First Nations owner of renowned Melbourne Mabu Mabu restaurant , for native produce and how it can connect us to our land. SHOW NOTES: Nicole Abadee Website: https://www.nicoleabadee.com.au Facebook: @booksbooksbookspodcast OR @nicole.abadee Twitter: @NicoleAbadee Instagram: @booksbooksbookspodcast OR @nicoleabadee Griffith Review Issue # 78 "A Matter of Taste" Website: https://www.griffithreview.com Facebook: @griffithreview Twitter: @GriffithReview Instagram: @griffithreviewSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

In this achingly tender, funny, clever debut novel set in the 1950s, talented Elizabeth Zott confronts misogyny and worse as she battles to create a place for herself in the male-dominated world of research chemistry. Things get worse when she falls in love with brilliant fellow scientist Calvin. Here Garmus dsicusses how Betty Friedan’s “The Feminine Mystique” inspired her and the joys of creating such an unconventional, empowered protagonist. SHOW NOTES: Nicole Abadee Website: https://www.nicoleabadee.com.au Facebook: @booksbooksbookspodcast OR @nicole.abadee Twitter: @NicoleAbadee Instagram: @booksbooksbookspodcast OR @nicoleabadee Bonnie Garmus "Lessons in Chemistry" Website: https://www.bonniegarmus.com Twitter: @BonnieGarmus Instagram: @bonnie_garmus_authorSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

In this week’s episode of the law school series, Nicole speaks with Dr Stacie Strong, Associate Professor, about her recent book, Legal Reasoning Across Commercial Disputes – Comparing Judicial and Arbitral Analyses¸ in which she considers the following three issues: Is legal reasoning in the judicial setting different from legal reasoning in the setting of commercial arbitration? Is legal reasoning in the context of international commercial arbitration different from that used in domestic commercial arbitration? Does legal reasoning in the commercial context differ between countries with a common law system and those with a civil law system? Dr Strong conducted an extensive survey of judges and arbitrators, as well as interviews and an analysis of judicial decisions and arbitral awards, and arrived at some interesting and at times surprising results. SHOW NOTES: Nicole Abadee Website: https://www.nicoleabadee.com.au Facebook: @booksbooksbookspodcast OR @nicole.abadee Twitter: @NicoleAbadee Instagram: @booksbooksbookspodcast OR @nicoleabadee University of Sydney Law School Website: https://www.sydney.edu.au/law/ Facebook: @sydneylawschool Twitter: @SydneyLawSchool Instagram: @sydneylawschool YouTube: @SydneyLawSchool Soundcloud: @sydneylawschool LinkedIn: The University of Sydney Law SchoolSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

In this edition of Griffith Review, which is produced in partnership with the Australian Antarctic Division, Ashley and Nicole discuss all things Antarctic –Australia’s role there, the fascinating million-year ice core project, the terrifying impact of climate change on the fragile Antarctic eco-systems and the melting of the ice sheets. SHOW NOTES: Nicole Abadee Website: https://www.nicoleabadee.com.au Facebook: @booksbooksbookspodcast OR @nicole.abadee Twitter: @NicoleAbadee Instagram: @booksbooksbookspodcast OR @nicoleabadee Griffith Review Issue # 75 "Learning Curves" Website: https://www.griffithreview.com/editions/escape-routes/ Facebook: @griffithreview Twitter: @GriffithReview Instagram: @griffithreviewSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Feminist, activist and writer Wendy McCarthy reveals in her new memoir, “Don’t Be Too Polite, Girls” how to be a strong feminist, a good mother and a good wife - all at the same time. Here she discusses how choosing the right life partner, her beloved Gordon McCarthy, enabled her to live a stimulating, purposeful life, with a brilliant career spanning the public, private, corporate and not-for-profit sectors. Her advice to women offered key roles? “Say yes and work it out later,” – just as a man would do. Gold. SHOW NOTES: Nicole Abadee Website: https://www.nicoleabadee.com.au Facebook: @booksbooksbookspodcast OR @nicole.abadee Twitter: @NicoleAbadee Instagram: @booksbooksbookspodcast OR @nicoleabadee Wendy McCarthy Facebook: @WendyMcCarthy Twitter: @takingalongview Instagram: @dontbetoopolitegirlsSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

“I am first and foremost a First Nations woman. I am that before I am a lawyer”. In this wide-ranging conversation with Teela Reid, Sydney Law School’s first First Nations Lawyer in Residence, she discusses her remarkable career as lawyer, activist and storyteller – the life-changing decision to move from teaching to law, her determination to make life better for the next generation of First Nations kids, her involvement in the Regional Dialogues which led to the Uluru Statement From the Heart and her tireless advocacy for the First Nations Voice to Parliament, which she sees as the beginning of a crucial reckoning between Black and white Australia. She also talks about the need for non-Indigenous Australians to show up and to do the work. A fascinating insight into one of the thought leaders of her generation, who is determined to use her role at the Law School to “make sure we continue to create space for other First Nations students and lawyers”. SHOW NOTES: Nicole Abadee Website: https://www.nicoleabadee.com.au Facebook: @booksbooksbookspodcast OR @nicole.abadee Twitter: @NicoleAbadee Instagram: @booksbooksbookspodcast OR @nicoleabadee University of Sydney Law School Website: https://www.sydney.edu.au/law/ Facebook: @sydneylawschool Twitter: @SydneyLawSchool Instagram: @sydneylawschool YouTube: @SydneyLawSchool Soundcloud: @sydneylawschool LinkedIn: The University of Sydney Law SchoolSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.