
Professor Gabrielle Appleby
PhD, University of Adelaide, 2012
LLM, University of Melbourne, 2009
LLB, University of Queensland, 2005
Dr Gabrielle Appleby is a Professor at the Law Faculty of University of New South Wales (Sydney). She researches and teaches in public law, with her areas of expertise including the role, powers and accountability of the Executive; parliamentary law and practice; the role of government lawyers; the integrity of the judicial branch and First Nations constitutional recognition. She is the Director of The Judiciary Project at the Gilbert + Tobin Centre of Public Law, the constitutional consultant to the Clerk of the Australian House of Representatives and a member of the Indigenous Law Centre. Gabrielle was the founding editor of Australia’s national public law blog, AUSPUBLAW (www.auspublaw.org).ÌýIn 2015-2018, Gabrielle was a Chief Investigator on the ARC Discovery Project, Law, Order and Federalism, looking at the effects of the High Court’s chapter III jurisprudence on State government law and order policy development. In 2016-2017, she worked as a pro bono constitutional adviser to the Regional Dialogues and the First Nations Constitutional Convention that led to the Uluru Statement from the Heart. Her books includeÌýThe Judge, The Judiciary and the Court: Individual, Collegial and Institutional Judicial Dynamics in AustraliaÌý(Cambridge University Press, 2021),ÌýJudicial Federalism in AustraliaÌý(Federation Press, 2021),ÌýAustralian Public LawÌý(3rd ed, Oxford University Press, 2018),ÌýThe Role of the Solicitor-General: Negotiating Law, Politics and the Public InterestÌý(Hart Publishing, 2016);ÌýThe Critical Judgments Project: Re-reading Monis v The QueenÌý(Federation Press, 2016) andÌýThe Tim Carmody AffairÌý(NewSouth Publishing, 2016). Gabrielle has also spent time working for the Queensland Crown Solicitor and the Victorian Government Solicitor’s Office.
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