Skip to menu Skip to content Skip to footer

2023

Conference Publication

Like for like (and dislike for dislike?): forfeiting substitute property under Australian proceeds of crime statutes

Dale, Gregory (2023). Like for like (and dislike for dislike?): forfeiting substitute property under Australian proceeds of crime statutes. Due process or due proceeds? The future of confiscation and related AML Laws in Australia, Brisbane, QLD Australia, 29 - 30 June 2023.

Like for like (and dislike for dislike?): forfeiting substitute property under Australian proceeds of crime statutes

2018

Conference Publication

Removing stubborn stains from the crime scene: should the state play a role lessening disgust?

Dale, Gregory (2018). Removing stubborn stains from the crime scene: should the state play a role lessening disgust?. Sins of the Past: Reflections and Future Directions, Hobart TAS, Australia, 21-24 November 2018.

Removing stubborn stains from the crime scene: should the state play a role lessening disgust?

2017

Conference Publication

The arts, artists and crime: can the body ever be severed from the body of work?

Dale, Gregory (2017). The arts, artists and crime: can the body ever be severed from the body of work?. Art in Law in Art Conference, University of Western Australia, Perth, 4-5 July 2017.

The arts, artists and crime: can the body ever be severed from the body of work?

2016

Conference Publication

The taint that remains: the role of emotions in proceeds of crime

Dale, Gregory (2016). The taint that remains: the role of emotions in proceeds of crime. First International Conference on Contemporary and Historical Approaches to Emotion, University of Wollongong, Sydney campus, 5-6 December 2016.

The taint that remains: the role of emotions in proceeds of crime

2016

Conference Publication

Proceeds of crime, snapshots in time

Dale, Gregory (2016). Proceeds of crime, snapshots in time. Disruption, Temporality, Law: The Future of Law and Society Scholarship, Griffith University, Brisbane, 1-3 December 2016.

Proceeds of crime, snapshots in time