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Professor Rick Bigwood
Professor

Rick Bigwood

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+61 7 336 52361

Overview

Background

Professor Rick Bigwood’s principal teaching and research interests lie in the areas of contract and property law. He was formerly a Senior Solicitor and Acting Principal Solicitor with the Federal Attorney-General's Department in Canberra (Office of Commercial Law). Before joining TC Beirne School of Law, Professor Bigwood taught at Bond University for five years, and he was on the Auckland Law Faculty for 16 years before that, where he was also the Director of the Research Centre for Business Law. He has published widely in leading international journals on subjects within contract, equity and property law, and he has been a keynote speaker at international conferences on contract law. His publications include the following books: Legal Method in New Zealand (Butterworths, 2001); Exploitative Contracts (Oxford University Press, 2003) (awarded the JF Northey Memorial Book Award for 2003); The Statute: Making and Meaning (LexisNexis, 2004); Public Interest Litigation: The New Zealand Experience in International Perspective (LexisNexis, 2006); The Permanent New Zealand Court of Appeal: Essays on the First 50 Years (Hart Publishing, 2009); Contract as Assumption: Essays on a Theme (by Brian Coote) (Hart Publishing, 2010); The Law of Remedies: New Directions in the Common Law (Irwin Law, 2010) (with Jeff Berryman); Cheshire & Fifoot, Law of Contract (various editions since 2012) (with Nick Seddon); and Variations on a Theme of Contract (LexisNexis, 2019) (with GHL Fridman). Professor Bigwood was formerly the General Editor of the New Zealand Universities Law Review, and he was Editor of the New Zealand Law Review 2002-2008 and University of Queensland Law Journal 2019-2021. He is currently a member of the editorial boards of the New Zealand Law Review and the Journal of Contract Law. Professor Bigwood has received a number of awards, prizes and honours for his teaching at various tertiary educational institutions, in a variety of countries, including a National Tertiary Teaching Excellence Award in 2006 (New Zealand). He is currently Academic Dean and Head of the TC Beirne School of Law at The University of Queensland and current holder of the Sir Gerard Brennan Chair in Law.

Availability

Professor Rick Bigwood is:
Available for supervision

Research interests

  • Contract law

  • Property law

Research impacts

While contracts are the backbone of commerce and general life, rarely are real-world bargaining situations perfectly balanced. People can be pressured, misled, or disadvantaged by reason of asymmetric power relations or informational imbalances. Professor Rick Bigwood’s research tackles this problem: how should private law distinguish acceptable persuasion from wrongful pressure, and legitimate advantage-taking from intolerable exploitation, so that contracts, and other voluntary dispositions, remain both freely made and socially legitimate. His scholarship charts the fine line between lawful bargaining and duress, undue influence, unconscionable dealing, and misleading conduct, and asks how courts should respond when consent is compromised or trust has been abused. This agenda matters because rules that are too permissive can legitimise the merely instrumental utilisation of persons, while rules that are too strict can stifle ordinary commerce. Bigwood’s long-standing contribution — spanning doctrinal analysis and legal philosophy — seeks principled tests that protect vulnerable parties without undermining certainty for businesses and consumers.

Professor Bigwood combines comparative doctrinal analysis (Australia, New Zealand, Canada, UK), case-based reasoning, and normative theory to evaluate how private law should respond to ill-gotten contracts (among other forms of voluntary disposition). His method interrogates the internal logic of legal and equitable doctrines, and their practical effects, often re-examining leading cases to clarify the policy justifications behind relief. Recent outputs apply this approach to misleading silence, the taxonomy of vitiating factors, and a critique of strict-liability unconscionability in the light of landmark decisions such as Uber Technologies Inc v Heller, in which his work is extensively cited. Bigwood’s work has refined the doctrinal architecture of vitiating factors and remedies, giving courts and lawyers better tools to identify and redress bargaining misconduct. His scholarship — spanning books (e.g., Exploitive Contracts, Cheshire & Fifoot Law of Contract), articles and chapters — has become a touchstone for judges and law reformers grappling with questions of consent and transactional fairness in modern contracting.

His widely cited analysis in the University of Toronto Law Journal on coercion in contracting, frames the doctrinal boundary between tolerated “pressure” and wrongful compulsion, while his doctrinal audits of undue influence in Australia post-Thorne v Kennedy highlight the need to restore fiduciary prophylaxis in the field (or else to openly justify its abandonment), a critique used by scholars and practitioners to reassess litigation strategy and judicial reasoning.

His recent outputs on legal fictions in contract and insurance law, supervening unconscionability, the taxonomisation of contract vitiation, and the unconscionable dealing doctrine in Anglo-Commonwealth legal systems, evidence ongoing relevance to courts and policy debates. Commercial, consumer, and litigation lawyers benefit from his analytical frameworks to assess risks in negotiations, draft fairer contracts, and advise clients when relief may be available according to equitable or statutory norms (e.g., unconscionability, misleading conduct). Judges, regulators and law reform bodies draw on Bigwood’s critiques and analyses to evaluate doctrinal drift and calibrate statutory interventions, and they benefit from clearer tests and taxonomies that make decisions more principled and consistent.

Collectively, these outcomes strengthen legal certainty while safeguarding voluntary exchange — a balance essential for consumers and businesses alike.

Works

Search Professor Rick Bigwood’s works on UQ eSpace

60 works between 1987 and 2025

21 - 40 of 60 works

2014

Book Chapter

The partial codification of contract: lessons from New Zealand

Bigwood, Rick (2014). The partial codification of contract: lessons from New Zealand. Codifying contract law: consumer law and international law perspectives. (pp. 165-203) edited by Mary Keyes and Therese Wilson. Farnham, Surrey, United Kingdom: Ashgate.

The partial codification of contract: lessons from New Zealand

2013

Journal Article

Still curbing unconscionability: Kakavas in the High Court of Australia

Bigwood, Rick (2013). Still curbing unconscionability: Kakavas in the High Court of Australia. Melbourne University Law Review, 37, 463-508.

Still curbing unconscionability: Kakavas in the High Court of Australia

2012

Book Chapter

Review of A. Swan and J. Adamski’s Canadian Contract Law

Bigwood, Rick (2012). Review of A. Swan and J. Adamski’s Canadian Contract Law. Canadian Contract Law. (pp. 313-322) edited by Angela Swan and Jakub Adamski. Ontario, Canada: LexisNexis.

Review of A. Swan and J. Adamski’s Canadian Contract Law

2012

Journal Article

Fairness Awry? Reflections on the BCLI Report on Proposals for Unfair Contracts Relief

Bigwood, Rick (2012). Fairness Awry? Reflections on the BCLI Report on Proposals for Unfair Contracts Relief. Canadian Business Law Journal, 52, 197-225.

Fairness Awry? Reflections on the BCLI Report on Proposals for Unfair Contracts Relief

2012

Book

Cheshire & Fifoot’s Law of Contract

Seddon, Nicholas , Bigwood, Rick and Ellinghaus, M. P. (2012). Cheshire & Fifoot’s Law of Contract. Sydney, Australia: LexisNexis, Butterworths.

Cheshire & Fifoot’s Law of Contract

2011

Journal Article

Ill-gotten contracts in New Zealand: parting thoughts on duress, undue influence and unconscionable dealing — Kiwi-style?

Bigwood, Rick (2011). Ill-gotten contracts in New Zealand: parting thoughts on duress, undue influence and unconscionable dealing — Kiwi-style?. Victoria University of Wellington Law Review, 42 (1), 83-116.

Ill-gotten contracts in New Zealand: parting thoughts on duress, undue influence and unconscionable dealing — Kiwi-style?

2011

Journal Article

Circumscribing election: reflections on the taxonomization and mental componentry of affirmation of a contract by election

Bigwood, Rick (2011). Circumscribing election: reflections on the taxonomization and mental componentry of affirmation of a contract by election. University of Queensland Law Journal, 32, 235-277.

Circumscribing election: reflections on the taxonomization and mental componentry of affirmation of a contract by election

2011

Journal Article

Lapse of offers due to changed circumstances: A contract conversation

McLauchlan, David W. and Bigwood, Rick (2011). Lapse of offers due to changed circumstances: A contract conversation. Journal of Contract Law, 27 (3), 222-246.

Lapse of offers due to changed circumstances: A contract conversation

2010

Journal Article

Doctrinal reform and post-contractual modifications in New Brunswick: Nav Canada v. Greater Fredericton Airport Authority Inc.

Bigwood, Rick (2010). Doctrinal reform and post-contractual modifications in New Brunswick: Nav Canada v. Greater Fredericton Airport Authority Inc.. Canadian Business Law Journal, 256-277.

Doctrinal reform and post-contractual modifications in New Brunswick: Nav Canada v. Greater Fredericton Airport Authority Inc.

2010

Journal Article

Fine-tuning affirmation of contract by election: part 2

Bigwood, Rick (2010). Fine-tuning affirmation of contract by election: part 2. New Zealand Law Review, 617-688.

Fine-tuning affirmation of contract by election: part 2

2010

Book

The Law of Remedies: New Directions in the Common Law

Berryman, Jeff and Bigwood, Rick eds. (2010). The Law of Remedies: New Directions in the Common Law. Toronto: Irwin Law.

The Law of Remedies: New Directions in the Common Law

2010

Journal Article

Fine-tuning affirmation of contract by election: part 1

Bigwood, Rick (2010). Fine-tuning affirmation of contract by election: part 1. New Zealand Law Review, 2010 (1), 37-91.

Fine-tuning affirmation of contract by election: part 1

2009

Journal Article

“Threats” versus “warnings”

Bigwood, Rick (2009). “Threats” versus “warnings”. New Zealand Law Journal, 385-387.

“Threats” versus “warnings”

2009

Book

The Permanent New Zealand Court of Appeal: Essays on the First 50 Years

Bigwood, Rick ed. (2009). The Permanent New Zealand Court of Appeal: Essays on the First 50 Years. Oxford: Hart Publishing.

The Permanent New Zealand Court of Appeal: Essays on the First 50 Years

2009

Book Chapter

From Morgan to Etridge: tracing the (dis)integration of undue influence in the United Kingdom

Bigwood, Rick (2009). From Morgan to Etridge: tracing the (dis)integration of undue influence in the United Kingdom. Exploring contract law. (pp. 379-430) edited by Jason W. Neyers, Richard Bronaugh and Stephen G. A. Pitel. Oxford: Hart Publishing.

From Morgan to Etridge: tracing the (dis)integration of undue influence in the United Kingdom

2008

Journal Article

Throwing the baby out with the bathwater? Four questions on the demise of lawful-act duress in New South Wales

Bigwood, Rick (2008). Throwing the baby out with the bathwater? Four questions on the demise of lawful-act duress in New South Wales. University of Queensland Law Journal, 27 (2), 41-84.

Throwing the baby out with the bathwater? Four questions on the demise of lawful-act duress in New South Wales

2006

Journal Article

The full truth about half-truths?

Bigwood, Rick (2006). The full truth about half-truths?. New Zealand Law Journal, 114-116.

The full truth about half-truths?

2006

Book

Public Interest Litigation: The New Zealand Experience in International Perspective

Bigwood, Rick ed. (2006). Public Interest Litigation: The New Zealand Experience in International Perspective. Wellington: LexisNexis.

Public Interest Litigation: The New Zealand Experience in International Perspective

2005

Journal Article

Contractual duress and the Supreme Court

Bigwood, Rick (2005). Contractual duress and the Supreme Court. New Zealand Law Journal, 140-141.

Contractual duress and the Supreme Court

2005

Journal Article

Contracts by unfair advantage: from exploitation to transactional neglect

Bigwood, Rick (2005). Contracts by unfair advantage: from exploitation to transactional neglect. Oxford Journal of Legal Studies, 25 (1), 65-96. doi: 10.1093/ojls/gqi004

Contracts by unfair advantage: from exploitation to transactional neglect

Funding

Past funding

  • 2018 - 2022
    Holding Redlich-UQ Property Law Research Partnership
    Holding Redlich
    Open grant

Supervision

Availability

Professor Rick Bigwood is:
Available for supervision

Looking for a supervisor? Read our advice on how to choose a supervisor.

Supervision history

Current supervision

  • Doctor Philosophy

    The Source, Nature and Limits of a Duty to Act Reasonably in Australian Contract Law

    Principal Advisor

    Other advisors: Dr Ryan Catterwell

Completed supervision

Media

Enquiries

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