Overview
Background
Tamara Walsh is a Professor of Law and Director of the UQ Pro Bono Centre. She has degrees in both Law and Social Work, and her interest is in social welfare law and human rights. Her research examines the impact of the law on vulnerable people including children and young people, people experiencing homelessness, people on low incomes, people with disabilities, mothers and carers. Her research has been widely published, both in Australia and internationally.
In 2008, Tamara designed and established the UQ Pro Bono Centre, along with Dr Paul O'Shea and Prof Ross Grantham. The UQ Pro Bono Centre facilitates student and staff participation in pro bono legal activities, particularly public interest research and law reform. It is now a flagship program of the UQ Law School.
In 2016, Tamara established the UQ Deaths in Custody Project, which she runs in partnership with Prisoners' Legal Service. This Project monitors deaths in custody across Australia, and administers a public website which is an important resource for researchers, coroners and members of the public: www.deaths-in-custody.project.uq.edu.au
In 2020, Tamara established the UQ/Caxton Human Rights Project, along with Bridget Burton. This project is staffed by volunteer law students and makes information on every case that refers to the Human Rights Act 2019 (Qld) publicly available: https://law.uq.edu.au/human-rights-cases.
Tamara is currently undertaking an ARC Linkage project on human rights dispute resolution in Australia (2023-2025) with A/Prof Dominique Allen (Monash University). She recently completed an ARC Linkage project on the criminalisation of poverty and homelessness in Australia (2017-2021).
Tamara lectures in human rights law, and runs the UQ Law School's clinical legal education and pro bono programs.
Availability
- Professor Tamara Walsh is:
- Available for supervision
- Media expert
Fields of research
Qualifications
- Bachelor of Law, University of New South Wales
- Bachelor (Honours), University of New South Wales
- Doctor of Philosophy, Queensland University of Technology
- Postgraduate Diploma in Legal Practice, Queensland University of Technology
Research interests
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Human rights law
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Law and social justice
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Social welfare law
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Discrimination/equal opportunity law
Research impacts
Legal systems often fail to protect society’s most vulnerable—those experiencing homelessness, poverty, disability, and systemic disadvantage. Professor Tamara Walsh’s research addresses the critical problem of how laws and legal institutions disproportionately criminalise and marginalise these groups. Her work interrogates the intersection of poverty and criminal law, the inadequacy of social welfare protections, and the failure of legal systems to uphold human rights in practice. Walsh’s research reveals how survival behaviours—such as sleeping in public, begging, or fare evasion—are routinely penalised, perpetuating cycles of disadvantage and exclusion. Her scholarship responds to the urgent need for legal reform that centres dignity, equity, and access to justice.
Professor Walsh employs a socio-legal and empirical methodology, combining doctrinal analysis with qualitative research and lived experience data. Her work spans human rights law, youth justice, social welfare law, and law reform. She has led multiple Australian Research Council (ARC) Linkage Projects, including national studies on the criminalisation of homelessness and poverty, and human rights dispute resolution. Walsh founded the UQ Pro Bono Centre, the Deaths in Custody Project, and the Human Rights Case Law Project, which engage law students in public interest research and advocacy. Her interdisciplinary approach integrates law, social work, and public policy, ensuring her research is both academically rigorous and socially impactful.
Walsh’s research has produced over 100 publications, including landmark studies on homelessness, youth justice, and social housing. Her work has informed law reform submissions, parliamentary inquiries, and judicial reasoning. The Criminalisation of Poverty and Homelessness Project involved interviews with over 160 stakeholders across Australia and led to policy recommendations adopted by legal centres and advocacy groups. Her analysis of eviction proceedings in social housing has highlighted systemic failures and influenced tenancy law debates. Walsh’s research has also shaped legal education, embedding human rights and social justice into clinical legal programs and mentoring future lawyers committed to equity and inclusion.
The beneficiaries of Walsh’s research include people experiencing homelessness, children in state care, low-income families, legal practitioners, policymakers, and students. Her work supports community legal centres, human rights commissions, and advocacy organisations in designing more inclusive legal responses. Law students benefit from her experiential learning programs, which foster public interest lawyering. Her research has been cited by the UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, and used in international forums to advocate for the decriminalisation of homelessness and the protection of socio-economic rights. Her influence extends across Australia, Europe, and the Global South, where her work informs comparative legal reform and rights-based policy development.
Professor Walsh’s research has led to measurable policy and institutional change. Her ARC-funded projects have shaped national debates on poverty and justice, and her work has been cited in government reports, academic literature, and UN submissions. She has received multiple awards for research excellence and public engagement, and her initiatives—such as the Deaths in Custody Database and Human Rights Case Law Repository—are widely used by coroners, legal professionals, and researchers. Her leadership in legal education has transformed how law schools engage with social justice, and her scholarship continues to influence law reform and human rights advocacy globally.
Works
Search Professor Tamara Walsh’s works on UQ eSpace
2016
Journal Article
'Public order' policing and the value of independent legal observers
Walsh, Tamara (2016). 'Public order' policing and the value of independent legal observers. Current Issues in Criminal Justice, 28 (1), 33-49. doi: 10.1080/10345329.2016.12036055
2016
Conference Publication
Freedom to Be a Mother: The Impacts of Women's Criminalisation on Child Protection
Walsh, Tamara K. E. (2016). Freedom to Be a Mother: The Impacts of Women's Criminalisation on Child Protection. Sisters Inside Conference, Brisbane, 21 October 2016.
2016
Journal Article
Ten years of public nuisance in Queensland
Walsh, Tamara K.E. (2016). Ten years of public nuisance in Queensland. Criminal Law Journal, 40 (2), 59-73.
2016
Journal Article
Sentencing parents: the consideration of dependent children
Walsh, Tamara and Douglas, Heather (2016). Sentencing parents: the consideration of dependent children. Adelaide Law Review, 37 (1), 135-161.
2016
Conference Publication
Legal Research in Child Protection: What Judicial Officers Say About the Child Protection System
Walsh, Tamara K. E. (2016). Legal Research in Child Protection: What Judicial Officers Say About the Child Protection System. Child and Family Welfare Symposium, University of Melbourne, 26 October 2016.
2015
Journal Article
New Zealanders in crisis in Australia: the absence of a social safety net
Walsh, Tamara (2015). New Zealanders in crisis in Australia: the absence of a social safety net. New Zealand Universities Law Review, 26 (3), 673-702.
2015
Other Outputs
Children with special needs and the right to education
Walsh, Tamara and Thomas, Kathryn (2015). Children with special needs and the right to education.
2015
Book Chapter
Mandatory Reporting of Child Abuse and Marginalised Families
Douglas, Heather and Walsh, Tamara (2015). Mandatory Reporting of Child Abuse and Marginalised Families. Mandatory Reporting Laws and the Identification of Severe Child Abuse and Neglect. (pp. 491-509) edited by Matthews, Ben and Bross, Donald C. New York, United States: Springer Netherlands. doi: 10.1007/978-94-017-9685-9_23
2015
Journal Article
Criminal justice research and how I realised I know nothing
Walsh, Tamara (2015). Criminal justice research and how I realised I know nothing. Pandora's Box (2015), 17-24.
2015
Journal Article
Negligence and special needs education: the case for recognising a duty to provide special education services in australian schools
Walsh, Tamara K.E. (2015). Negligence and special needs education: the case for recognising a duty to provide special education services in australian schools. Education Law Journal, 18 (1), 32-50.
2015
Book Chapter
Mothers in crisis: mothers and the child protection system
Walsh, Tamara and Douglas, Heather (2015). Mothers in crisis: mothers and the child protection system. Mothers at the Margins: Stories of Challenge, Resistance and Love. (pp. 89-107) edited by Lisa Raith, Jenny Jones and Marie Porter. Newcastle upon Tyne, UK: Cambridge Scholars Publishing.
2014
Journal Article
'Homelessness and the law: constitution, criminal law and human rights', by Gijsbert Johan Vonk and Alerbtjan Tollenaar (eds)
Walsh, Tamara (2014). 'Homelessness and the law: constitution, criminal law and human rights', by Gijsbert Johan Vonk and Alerbtjan Tollenaar (eds). European Journal of Homelessness, 8 (2), 293-296.
2014
Journal Article
Homelessness legislation for Australia: a missed opportunity
Walsh, Tamara (2014). Homelessness legislation for Australia: a missed opportunity. University of New South Wales Law Journal, 37 (3), 820-846.
2014
Journal Article
Juvenile economic sanctions: a logical alternative?
Walsh, Tamara (2014). Juvenile economic sanctions: a logical alternative?. Criminology and Public Policy, 13 (1), 69-77. doi: 10.1111/1745-9133.12070
2013
Journal Article
Continuing the Stolen Generations: child protection interventions and indigenous people
Douglas, Heather Anne and Walsh, Tamara K.E. (2013). Continuing the Stolen Generations: child protection interventions and indigenous people. International Journal of Children's Rights, 21 (1), 59-87. doi: 10.1163/157181812X639288
2012
Journal Article
Lawyers' views of decision-making in child protection matters: the tension between adversarialism and collaborative approaches
Walsh, Tamara and Douglas, Heather (2012). Lawyers' views of decision-making in child protection matters: the tension between adversarialism and collaborative approaches. Monash University Law Review, 38 (2), 181-211.
2012
Journal Article
Children with special needs and the right to education
Walsh, Tamara (2012). Children with special needs and the right to education. Australian Journal of Human Rights, 18 (1), 27-56. doi: 10.1080/1323-238X.2012.11882097
2012
Journal Article
Lawyers and social workers working together: ethic of care and feminist legal practice in community law
Walsh, Tamara (2012). Lawyers and social workers working together: ethic of care and feminist legal practice in community law. Griffith Law Review, 21 (3), 752-771. doi: 10.1080/10383441.2012.10854761
2012
Journal Article
Adjustments, accommodation and inclusion: children with disabilities in Australian primary schools
Walsh, Tamara (2012). Adjustments, accommodation and inclusion: children with disabilities in Australian primary schools. International Journal of Law and Education, 17 (2), 23-38.
2011
Other Outputs
A special court for special cases
Walsh, Tamara (2011). A special court for special cases. St. Lucia, QLD, Australia: Australasian Institute of Judicial Administration.
Funding
Past funding
Supervision
Availability
- Professor Tamara Walsh is:
- Available for supervision
Looking for a supervisor? Read our advice on how to choose a supervisor.
Available projects
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Human rights and social welfare law
The PhD program provides students with an opportunity to examine the legal and social impacts of human rights law, and explore in depth the effects of the law and legal systems on people experiencing social and economic disadvantage. Students could apply human rights law, and related scholarship, to a number of different legal areas and problems, including:
- Social welfare
- Child protection
- Housing and homelessness
- Criminalisation, policing and corrections
For further information contact Professor Tamara Walsh, e: t.walsh@law.uq.edu.au.
Supervision history
Current supervision
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Doctor Philosophy
Human rights and COVID: What did we learn and where to from here?
Principal Advisor
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Doctor Philosophy
Understanding the lived experiences of young people involved in the youth justice system in Queensland: A phenomenological and human rights-based approach.
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Associate Professor Jemma Venables
Completed supervision
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2018
Doctor Philosophy
Capacity and Treatment Refusal: How Law Should Deal with the Case of Anorexia Nervosa
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Emeritus Professor Malcolm Parker
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2019
Doctor Philosophy
Plain language and the law: Rethinking legal information for vulnerable people in Australia
Associate Advisor
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2007
Doctor Philosophy
EQUALITY OF OPPORTUNITY FOR ALL?: An Assessment of the Effectiveness of the Anti-Discrimination Act 1991 (Qld) as a Tool for the Delivery of Equality of Opportunity in Education to People with Impairments
Associate Advisor
Media
Enquiries
Contact Professor Tamara Walsh directly for media enquiries about:
- Child protection
- Civil rights
- Community justice
- constitutional law
- Corrections and law
- Criminal law
- Disability
- Discrimination
- Homelessness and the law
- Human rights law
- Justice
- Law - homelessness
- Law and homelessness
- Law and poverty
- Moving on powers
- Police and impoverished people
- Poverty and the law
- pro bono law
- Right to education
- Social justice
- Social security law
- Social welfare law
- Summary offences law
- Youth justice
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