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Christine Parker

Researcher at University of Melbourne

Publications -  162
Citations -  3224

Christine Parker is an academic researcher from University of Melbourne. The author has contributed to research in topics: Enforcement & Legal profession. The author has an hindex of 28, co-authored 154 publications receiving 2984 citations. Previous affiliations of Christine Parker include University of New South Wales & Monash University, Clayton campus.

Papers
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The Extent to Which Obesity and Population Nutrition Are Considered by Institutional Investors Engaged in Responsible Investment in Australia - A Review of Policies and Commitments.

TL;DR: This paper investigated the extent to which obesity prevention and population nutrition are considered by Australian institutional investors engaged in responsible investment, and found that the most commonly identified strategy was ESG integration, followed by sustainability-themed investing and positive screening.
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Inside running: Internal complaints management practice and regulation in the legal profession

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examine what makes for good complaints management in legal practice, how law firms are faring at complaints management, and the role of a regulator in encouraging implementation of effective complaints management.
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Do Businesses Take Compliance Seriously

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present data from a survey of the largest Australian businesses on the extent to which they have implemented trade practices compliance systems, and they show that on the whole Australian business implementation of trade practice compliance systems is partial, symbolic and half-hearted.
Posted Content

What Do Australian Businesses Really Think of the ACCC, and Does it Matter?

TL;DR: The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission ('ACCC') has been heavily criticised by business as mentioned in this paper, and their survey results on business opinions of the ACCC along six dimensions that are explained in the paper -the ACCC's procedural and substantive justice, the likelihood and severity of ACCC enforcement action, strategic sophistication, how undogmatic it is, how accommodating and whether it is biased in the way it targets large and small businesses for enforcement action.
Posted Content

How Much Does it Hurt? How Australian Businesses Think About the Costs and Gains of Compliance with the Trade Practices Act

TL;DR: In this article, the authors use evidence from a survey of Australian businesses' experience of compliance and enforcement under the Trade Practices Act (TPA) to examine how large Australian businesses perceive the costs and gains of compliance with the TPA.