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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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Journal Article

The ethical infrastructure of legal practice in larger law firms: values, policy and behaviour

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examine the impact of the cultures and organisational structures of large law firms on individual lawyers' ethics and suggest that law firms in Australia should consciously design and implement "ethical infrastructures" to both counteract pressures for misbehaviour and positively promote ethical behaviour and discussion.
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The Caged Chicken or the Free-Range Egg? The Regulatory and Market Dynamics of Layer-Hen Welfare in the UK, Australia and the USA

TL;DR: In this article, the authors compared the developments in government regulation and market segmentation of layer-hen welfare in the UK, Australia and the USA, and identified the key state, market and civil society actors in each country and their role in driving or resisting higher standards examined, including the increasingly influential role of animal welfare organizations and food corporations.
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Economic rationalities of governance and ambiguity in the criminalization of cartels

TL;DR: This article examined the rationality of anti-cartel law from the point of view of the 'legal consciousness' of 25 business people who have faced enforcement action for cartel conduct, and found that among business people, there are similar differences and ambiguities about the rationale for criminal anticartel laws, and the very meaning of acting economically, as there are among scholars and policy elites.
Book

Just Lawyers: Regulation and Access to Justice

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a case study of the legal profession in the Republic of Ireland, focusing on the following: 1. Doorkeepers to Many Rooms 2. Judging Lawyers by Justice 3. Access to Justice 4. Integrating Justice 5. The Ethics of Justice 6. Competing Images of the Legal Profession: Competing Regulatory Strategies 7. Renegotiating the Regulation of the Law Profession 8. Speaking Justice to Power: A Fifth Wave of Access to justice Reform?
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Out of the cage and into the barn: supermarket power food system governance and the regulation of free range eggs

TL;DR: This article argued that Australian supermarkets are amassing not only economic power but also political power in the food system, by reference to two major supermarkets' initiatives in the regulatory space around food labelling, specifically the contested meaning of free range eggs.