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Professor Graeme Orr
Professor

Graeme Orr

Email: 
Phone: 
+61 7 336 53014

Overview

Background

The law of politics, in particular electoral law, is Professor Graeme Orr's primary research expertise. He has authored The Law of Politics (1st edn 2010, 2nd edn 2019) and Ritual and Rhythm in Electoral Systems (2015), co-authored The Law of Deliberative Democracy (2016), co-edited Realising Democracy (2003), Electoral Democracy: Australian Prospects (2011) and The Cambridge Handbook of Deliberative Constitutionalism (2018) and edited 3 symposia on the law of politics. His doctoral thesis explored the nature and regulation of electoral bribery. In the field of the law of politics, he does consultancy and pro bono work, and regular media commentary. Graeme has published over 100 commentary pieces in both the traditional press and online outlets.

Graeme has also published extensively in labour law, the law of negligence and on issues of language and law. Currently he is the legal adviser on the NSW Electoral Commission’s iVote panel and was recently part of the Australian Republican Movement’s Constitutional Advisory Board that drafted a model for an elected Head of State.

An Associate to two judges in the Federal Court of Australia and solicitor of the Queensland Supreme Court, prior to joining UQ Graeme was also an Associate Professor at Griffith University, where he taught for 13 years. In recent times he has been international editor of the Election Law Journal and board member of the Australian Journal of Labour Law. He was formerly managing editor of the Griffith Law Review, columnist with the Alternative Law Journal on sport's links to law, and employment law columnist with the Australian Journal of Administrative Law. He currently authors the entry on Australia for The Annual Register, a 257 year old almanac of world affairs.

He has been elected as a Fellow of the Australian Academy of Law (2014) and the Australian Academy of Social Sciences (2020).

Availability

Professor Graeme Orr is:
Available for supervision
Media expert

Qualifications

  • Bachelor of Arts, The University of Queensland
  • Bachelor of Law, The University of Queensland
  • Masters (Coursework) of Law, University College London
  • Postgraduate Diploma in Education, Griffith University
  • Doctor of Philosophy, Griffith University

Research interests

  • Law of politics: parliamentary law and electoral law

  • Non-instrumental approaches to Law and Politics (ritual, symbols, language)

  • Labour and employment law

Works

Search Professor Graeme Orr’s works on UQ eSpace

226 works between 1995 and 2024

221 - 226 of 226 works

1997

Journal Article

The choice not to choose: Commonwealth electoral law and the withholding of preferences

Orr, Graeme (1997). The choice not to choose: Commonwealth electoral law and the withholding of preferences. Monash University Law Review, 23 (2), 285-311.

The choice not to choose: Commonwealth electoral law and the withholding of preferences

1997

Journal Article

Marketing games: the regulation of Olympic indicia and images in Australia

Orr, Graeme (1997). Marketing games: the regulation of Olympic indicia and images in Australia. European Intellectual Property Review, 9, 504-508.

Marketing games: the regulation of Olympic indicia and images in Australia

1996

Journal Article

Giving theory a life: first year students' conceptions of legal theory

Orr, Graeme and Keyes, Mary (1996). Giving theory a life: first year students' conceptions of legal theory. Legal Education Review, 7, 31-65.

Giving theory a life: first year students' conceptions of legal theory

1996

Journal Article

Surviving the fall: active concern and negligent inaction in Camus' The Fall (La Chute)

Orr, Graeme (1996). Surviving the fall: active concern and negligent inaction in Camus' The Fall (La Chute). Griffith Law Review, 5, 104-123.

Surviving the fall: active concern and negligent inaction in Camus' The Fall (La Chute)

1996

Journal Article

Abrogating the Beaudesert Aberration: The High Court on Governmental Liability in Northern Territory v Mengel

Orr, Graeme (1996). Abrogating the Beaudesert Aberration: The High Court on Governmental Liability in Northern Territory v Mengel. University of Tasmania Law Review, 15, 136-141.

Abrogating the Beaudesert Aberration: The High Court on Governmental Liability in Northern Territory v Mengel

1995

Journal Article

Is an Innkeeper Her Brother's Keeper? The Liability of Alcohol Servers

Orr, Graeme David (1995). Is an Innkeeper Her Brother's Keeper? The Liability of Alcohol Servers. Torts Law Journal, 3 (3), 239-254.

Is an Innkeeper Her Brother's Keeper? The Liability of Alcohol Servers

Funding

Past funding

  • 2017
    Comprehensive free access to Australian industrial and workplace law (ARC LIEF project administered by University of Technology Sydney)
    University of Technology Sydney
    Open grant
  • 2013 - 2015
    The Law of Deliberative Democracy: Theory and Reform
    ARC Discovery Projects
    Open grant
  • 2010 - 2012
    Dollars and Democracy: The dynamics of Australian political finance and its regulation (ARC Discovery Project Administered by The University of Melbourne)
    University of Melbourne
    Open grant

Supervision

Availability

Professor Graeme Orr is:
Available for supervision

Before you email them, read our advice on how to contact a supervisor.

Supervision history

Current supervision

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Representative Democracy and Political Constitutionalism in Practice: Opposition to Indigenous Representative Bodies in Australia

    Principal Advisor

    Other advisors: Dr Rebecca Ananian-Welsh, Dr Dylan Lino

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Proposed PhD - Disability within the judiciary: An analysis of the barriers for lawyers with visual disabilities to be appointed to the judicial branch of government in New Zealand and Australia.

    Associate Advisor

    Other advisors: Professor Paul Harpur

Completed supervision

Media

Enquiries

Contact Professor Graeme Orr directly for media enquiries about:

  • constitutional law
  • Employment and labour law
  • Language and law
  • Law of elections
  • Law of politics
  • Political Parties and Finance

Need help?

For help with finding experts, story ideas and media enquiries, contact our Media team:

communications@uq.edu.au