ASPIRATIONS & INSPIRATIONS · ASPIRATIONS & INSPIRATIONS Law Research Newsletter September-October...
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ASPIRATIONS & INSPIRATIONS
Law Research Newsletter
September-October 2017
Conferences/Seminars
Research Week 2017
The Centre for Professional Legal Education (CPLE) hosted a Symposium during Re-
search Week, entitled ‘Law Without Lawyers?’. The Symposium explored the likely
impact of technological innovation on the practice of law, and the implications—both
positive and negative—of the possibility that legal services will be delivered without
the direct involvement of lawyers.
The Keynote address, ‘The Disruptive Technologies Most Likely to Make Lawyers
Redundant’, was delivered by Matthew Burgess, Director of View Legal, and Associ-
ate Professor Kate Galloway. A Panel Discussion and Debate with invited Speakers
was held in the afternoon, and an Interactive Workshop capped off a successful day,
attended by industry, staff and students.
Mr Matthew Burgess (View Legal) presenting the keynote address
Professor Rachael Field presenting on ‘family law without lawyers’ during the Inter-active Workshop
Members of the Panel from L-R: Executive Dean Professor Nick James, Dr Michael
Guihot (QUT), Dr Nigel Stobbs (QUT), Associate Professor Kate Galloway, Matthew
Burgess (View Legal), Andrea Perry-Petersen (LawRight) and Assistant Professor
Jackson Walkden-Brown
Conferences/Seminars cont’d
Twilight Seminar
Ken Yin, from Edith Cowan University, School of Law presented a well-attended Twi-
light Seminar entitled ‘Law as “reason free from passion”: the art of syllogistic analy-
sis’. Teaching foundation law students to solve legal problems is an exceptionally
challenging task. Somewhat surprisingly, Australian literature on the mechanics of
legal problem solving is virtually non-existent, leaving first-year law teachers to fend
for themselves in designing this element of their curricula. The seminar explained how
syllogistic analysis provides the underlying basis for critical analysis in the context of
legal problem solving, using everyday learning experience as a means of demonstrat-
ing relevant techniques. You can access the recording of Ken’s talk here.
In October, Professor Dan Svantesson chaired a Panel on ‘Contractual Issues in Online Social Media’ at a Colloquium at the Max Planck Institute in Luxembourg for Procedural Law, on ‘Jurisdiction, Conflict of Laws and Data Protection in Cyberspace’.
From L-R, Adjunct Associate Professor Liz Spencer, Assistant Professors
Maria Nicolae and Jackson Walkden-Brown, and Twilight Speaker Ken Yin
Assistant Professor Jackson Walkden-Brown, Ken Yin
and Executive Dean Professor Nick James
Twilight Speaker Dr Ken Yin presenting ‘Law as “reason free from pas-
sion”: the art of syllogistic analysis’
Conferences/Seminars cont’d
Assistant Professor Annette Greenhow attended the Australian and NZ Sports Law
Association (ANZSLA) Annual Conference in Sydney. The conference theme was ‘Are
you match ready? Key developments and emerging issues in sports law”. The confer-
ence was attended by over 200 delegates from law, sport, government, academia and
industry.
Bond University’s Chancellor, Dr Annabelle Bennet, delivered the keynote address
with Dr Ulrich Haas on the role of the Court of Arbitration for Sport and the Russian
Doping Scandal, setting the scene for an informative and engaging conference.
Assistant Professor Greenhow participated in a Panel discussion on Concussion in
Sport. Other panellists contributed medical perspectives, sports administrators per-
spectives, litigation perspectives, insurer perspectives and player perspectives.
In October, Professor Jon Crowe presented at the Politics in the Pub event hosted
by the Ngara Institute in Mullumbimby on the topic ‘Imagining Anarchy’. This is a regu-
lar series of informal public seminars discussing innovative responses to political is-
sues. The event was attended by around 100 people from the local community. There
was a lively discussion about alternative methods of community organisation and the
importance of local and democratic solutions to social problems. Click here to see a
recording of Professor Crowe’s talk .
Associate Professor Annette Greenhow (3rd from right) during a Panel
discussion during ANZSLA
Professor Jonathan Crowe presenting ‘Imagining Anarchy’ at Politics in the
Pub, Ngara Institute, Mullumbimby
Impact and Engagement
On the back of a highly successful Colloquium on Food GIs and FTAs in June this
year, Professor William van Caenegem was invited to meet with a group of Parlia-
mentarians from the European Parliament to discuss the issue of GIs in the forthcom-
ing FTA negotiations. Professor van Caenegem also used this opportunity to meet
and continue the discussion with another Colloquium attendee, IP Australia.
Associate Professor Michelle Markham’s recent article on international arbitration in
the ADRJ attracted the attention of the Director of the Tax and Transfer Policy Institute
at the Crawford School of the ANU, and she was asked to write a post for the Austax-
policy blog. Check out ‘Recurring Resistance to Tax Treaty Arbitration as a Dispute
Resolution Mechanism’ on the Austaxpolicy blog here.
The Opinion of the Advocate General in Case C-210/16 before the Court of Justice of
the European Union was released in October, and in footnote 43, the Advocate Gen-
eral refers to a book chapter written by Professor Dan Svantesson. This is a signifi-
cant indicator of research impact, given how rarely reference is made to academic
writings in this context.
Assistant Professor Tory Baumfield assisted a reporter from the Gympie Times to
understand the complexities around the water reforms taking place in the region. She
is quoted within the resulting article, see here.
An article co-authored by Associate Professor Danielle Ireland-Piper and former
Bond Senior Teaching Fellow Kim Weinert in 2014, entitled ‘Is there a “right” to
sport?’ was cited in the Victorian Parliament (FN 4). The link to Hansard is here.
Professor Rachael Field, and Assistant Professors Elizabeth Greene and Jodie
O’Leary made submissions to the QLRC review into Domestic Violence Disclosure
Schemes. The Final Report has been released, and they are cited numerous times in
that report. Bond was named directly in FNs 22, 68, 80, 131, 216 and in s6.47, s6.110,
s6.125, although there are many other instances where submission numbers are cit-
ed. The full report can be read here.
Book Review
Associate Professor Danielle Ireland-Piper’s book ‘Accountability in Extraterritorial-
ity: A Comparative and International Law Perspective (Edward Elgar, 2017) has again
been the subject of an international review, the first being in South Africa, and this
time in France. Jean-Sylvestre Berge of the University of Lyon described the book as
‘interesting in more than one way’ and noted, among other things, that it contained
‘useful historical summaries’ and delivered ‘theoretical principles which described the
basis of competence for extraterritorial action’. Translation provided by Ms Melodie
Giradin, a native French speaker and student at New York University.
is a condition of registration that in instances where the trade mark is
used on beer that is not brewed by the applicant or that is not
Publications
Books
Congratulations to Professor Dan Svantesson on the following two book publica-
tions:
Svantesson, D. J. B. (2017). Solving the Internet Jurisdiction Puzzle. Oxford: Oxford
University Press.
Polcak, R., & Svantesson, D. J. B. (2017). Information Sovereignty: Data Privacy,
Sovereign Powers and the Rule of Law. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar Publishing. DOI:
10.4337/9781786439222
Other Publications
Abate, R. S., & Crowe, J. (2017). From inside the cage to outside the box: Natural
resources as a platform for nonhuman animal personhood in the U.S. and Australia.
Global Journal of Animal Law, 5(1), 54-78.
Crowe, J. (2017). Mediation ethics and the challenge of professionalisation. Bond
Law Review, 29(1), 5-14.
Crowe, J. (2017). Metaphysical foundations of natural law theories. In G. Duke, & R.
P. George (Eds.), The Cambridge companion to natural law jurisprudence (pp. 76-
102). UK: Cambridge University Press. DOI: 10.1017/9781316341544.005
Dietrich, J. (2017). Consumer protection, recreational activities and personal injury
compensation: Inconsistency in need of reform. In R. Levy, M. O'Brien, S. Rice, P.
Ridge, & M. Thornton (Eds.), New Directions For Law in Australia: Essays in Contem-
porary Law Reform (pp. 291-299). Canberra: Australian National University. DOI:
http://press-files.anu.edu.au/downloads/press/n2641/pdf/ch26.pdf
Field, R. M., & Hyman, H. E. M. (2017). Non-adversarial approaches to domestic vio-
lence: Putting therapeutic jurisprudence theory into practice. Journal of Judicial Ad-
ministration, 26(4), 275-292.
Publications cont’d
Galloway, K. (2017). Big data: A case study of disruption and government power.
Alternative Law Journal, 42(2), 89-95. DOI: 10.1177/1037969X17710612
Castan, M., & Galloway, K. (2017). Re-evaluating legal citation in a digital landscape.
Legal Information Management, 17, 190-205. DOI: 10.1017/S147266961700038X
James, N., & Burton, K. (2017). Measuring the critical thinking skills of law students
using a whole-of-curriculum approach. Legal Education Review, 27(1).
Larkin, D. (2017). Native title valued. Alternative Law Journal, 41(4), 285. DOI:
10.1177/1037969X1604100418
Larkin, D. (2017). Indigenous citizenship rights 50 years after the referendum. Eureka
Street, 27(5).
Markham, M. (2017). New developments in dispute resolution in international tax.
Revenue Law Journal, 25(1).
Markham, M. (2017). Recurring resistance to tax treaty arbitration as a dispute resolu-
tion mechanism. Austaxpolicy: The Tax and Transfer Policy Blog.
Svantesson, D. J. B., & Azzopardi, R. (2017). Systematic government access to
private-sector data in Australia. In F. H. Cate & J. X. Dempsey (Eds.), Bulk Collection:
Systematic Government Access to Private-Sector Data (pp. 221-240). Oxford: Oxford
University Press.
Svantesson, D. J. B., & Van Caenegem, W. (2017). Is it time for an offence of
‘dishonest algorithmic manipulation for electoral gain’? Alternative Law Journal, 42(3),
184-189. DOI: 10.1177/1037969X17730192
Svantesson, D. J. B. (2017). Enter the quagmire - the complicated relationship be-
tween data protection law and consumer protection law. Computer Law and Security
Review. DOI: 10.1016/j.clsr.2017.08.003
Faculty-Published Journals
Most popular papers downloaded in October:
Australian Journal of Clinical Education
Sarah Kabir, ‘Addressing the Barriers to Clinical Education in Emergency Medi-
cine’ (20 downloads)
Francina Cantatore, Linda Crane and Deborah Wilmoth, ‘Defining Clinical Educa-
tion: Parallels in Practice’ (15 downloads)
Louise Parsons, ’Competitive Mooting as Clinical Legal Education: Can Real Bene-
fits be Derived from an Unreal Experience?’ (7 downloads)
Bond Law Review
Eric Colvin, ‘Causation in Criminal Law’ (480 downloads)
H.K.Lücke, ‘Ratio Decidendi: Adjudicative Rational and Source of Law’ (330 down-
loads)
Nicholas James, ’Separate Legal Personality: Legal Reality and Metaphor’ (322
downloads)
Corporate Governance eJournal
Kim Kercher, ‘Corporate social responsibility: Impact of globalisation and internation-
al business’ (814 downloads)
Matthew Hooper, ‘The Business Judgement Rule: ASIC v Rich and the reasonable-
rational divide’ (216 downloads)
Tim Jay and Madeline Taylor, ‘A case of champagne: a study of geographical indi-
cations’ (191 downloads)
Owen Dixon Society eJournal
Gerard Carney, ’The State Trials of Louis XVI & Marie-Antoinette’ (19 downloads)
Geof Barlow and Jim Corkery, ‘Walter Campbell: A distinguished life’ (14 down-
loads)
Katie Allan, ’From Parker v Parker to Pirate Kings: The legacy of Lord Denning—A
toast’ (9 downloads)
Revenue Law Journal
Braedon Clark, ’The Meaning of Income: the Implications of Stone v FCT’ (124
downloads)
Stephen Barkoczy, ’The Nature of “Present Entitlement” in the Taxation of
Trusts’ (117 downloads)
Ken Devos, ’Tax Evasion Behaviour and Demographic Factors: An Explanatory
Study in Australia’ (93 downloads)
Sports Law eJournal
Natasha Schot, ‘Negligent liability in sport’ (201 downloads)
Jim Corkery, ‘Dangerous Sports and Obvious Risks - Anyone For Cricket?’ (44
downloads)
Chris Davies, ’Match and spot fixing: Challenges for the International Cricket Coun-
cil’ (36 downloads)
Academic Spotlight
Assistant Professor Victoria (Tory) Baumfield
Research areas of interest
I am generally interested in corporate law and corporate governance, and in particu-
lar in the governance of monopolistic government owned businesses such as our
public water and energy suppliers, public transport providers such as Queensland
Rail, and the NBN. I am extremely interested at the moment in the public law value
implications of providing basic services through government entities: should the fact
of government ownership imply that we have (or should have) different expectations
for these businesses than traditional for profit businesses? I am troubled by the ex-
pectation that has ruled the day in Australia since the early 1990s that state owned
infrastructure businesses should be run on a profit-maximising basis when they tend
to be run as monopolists with a captive audience of customers. (This is particularly
true for water supply.) This expectation was based on the premise that these indus-
tries would be opened up to competition, but in many instances that has not hap-
pened, and where competition has been introduced, that competition has been tep-
id, at best. I am also looking at the extent to which participatory governance struc-
tures might be an appropriate means of solving some of the problems with how state
-owned monopoly businesses are managed.
Current research projects
I am madly trying to finish writing the first draft of my PhD thesis, which explores my
concerns with government owned businesses that I described above. I am doing my
PhD at UQ. I have a couple of other papers in the pipeline based on conference
and workshop presentations that I did this year (discussed in more detail in response
to the next question), but I have decided to focus on completing my first draft of my
PhD before putting any more time into them. It has been too distracting over the
past year or two taking advantage of the other publication opportunities that have
presented themselves (see below), but now I feel like I should be making my PhD
my priority so I can get it off my plate!
Recent publications
I have two book chapters currently in publication: a chapter on water supply govern-
ance in the TICLP-sponsored book on “Order and Disorder” co-edited by Danielle
Ireland-Piper and Leon Wolff, which should be out soon, and a chapter critiquing the
explosion of hybrid business forms (which are new corporate forms that are intended
to be used by social enterprises with both profit and public interest objectives) in an
edited volume on corporate governance and sustainability to be published by Cam-
bridge in 2018. That volume was co-edited by Beate Sjafjell of the University of
Oslo and Irene Lynch-Fannon of University College, Cork, who both serve on the
steering committee (along with me) of the Daughters of Themis International Net-
work of Female Business Scholars.
I also presented a paper on interdisciplinary research methods in law at the Daugh-
ters of Themis workshop on interdisciplinary research in Kea, Greece earlier this
year. I will seek to publish that eventually, but am holding off on revising it until I
finish the first draft of my thesis. Similarly, I have about 10,000 words of fairly pol-
ished material that I cut from my Cambridge book chapter which could easily make
Academic Spotlight cont’d
up a journal article, but I am going to hold off on finalising that material and submit-
ting it for publication until I get the PhD drafting done because I have found it too
easy to get distracted focusing on other publications while the PhD languishes. Pri-
orities!
What is your dream project/area of research to work on?
I am very lucky that I basically got to work on my dream project as a very junior liti-
gation associate when I was chosen to work on the French Banks Holocaust Litiga-
tion, defending Barclays Bank and JP Morgan in a series of related class actions
filed in the US federal courts in New York City, in early 1998. The claims alleged that
the banks had seized Jewish account holders’ funds in order to stay open during the
Nazi Occupation of France in World War II and never returned them. Nobody knew
what had actually happened as the lawsuit was filed so far after the events in ques-
tion, and the banks had no records. Unlike the other defendants, who focused main-
ly on trying to get the claims dismissed on statute of limitations and other grounds,
our clients sincerely wanted to know what had happened and were determined to
make good any valid claims. I was sent to France to scour the French National Ar-
chives, reviewing materials that were subject to French Privacy Legislation until the
early 2000s and hence had never been eyeballed by anyone in many cases; not
since the Allies had shipped the documents to the Archives after liberating Paris in
August 1944. I only got to see the documents because we got special permission
from the French government, which obviously took an interest in the litigation. The
Nazis had kept the most detailed records you could possibly imagine. The lead law-
yer on the case was the legendary American First Amendment lawyer, Floyd
Abrams, who I ended up working with very closely due to my unique position as the
only team member on the litigation who knew all the facts. Floyd told me not to come
home until I had figured out who our relevant account holders were, what assets
they had on deposit at our clients’ branches, and what happened to the funds. It took
me 7 months, but we figured it all out. I say “we” because my law firm hired several
recent university graduates to work under my direction at the Archives and we did
the painstaking work of piecing together highly fragmented evidence together, as a
team. I came up with an analytical process that the French Government ended up
directing every other bank that had responsibility for bank accounts that were open
in France during WWII to apply to their own accounts. I worked closely with the
French Government, which had by this point established three separate commis-
sions to investigate the fate of “spoliated” Jewish assets. We were able to establish
that our clients had very little liability and hence negotiated a favourable settlement
(which was a great outcome for our clients) while also helping to shed substantial
light on an area of history that had been shamefully neglected up until that point of
time. This research project required analysis of US law, current French law, Vichy
law, and Nazi regulations, as well as a sprinkling of history, political science, and
international relations. As someone whose undergrad degree was in International
Relations and French, this was totally my dream project. As part of this project, I
wrote a 500 page history and analysis of the relevant events, which is currently, un-
fortunately, locked in a bank vault in London and will likely never see the light of day.
I used to always joke that it was my fake PhD. I guess I am lucky that I was able to
get to work on my dream project in such a major capacity at such a young age! And I
got to learn from one of the most gifted lawyers in the world, Floyd Abrams. The all-
expenses paid stay in Paris didn’t hurt, either.
Best research advice you can share
Never assume anything. Anything that you assume without checking will inevitably
be wrong. Second, try to “touch” your research every day, even if only for a few
minutes. It really does keep your mind in it so that you don’t fall behind. Oh, and use
Endnote! It revolutionised my ability to keep track of my sources and greatly simpli-
fied my writing process. I could never go back to writing pre-Endnote. The three
days’ investment (it took me to really get comfortable with it and enter a boatload of
sources) (by the way, that is what research assistants are for!) has been paid back
in spades through the time it has saved me.
Academic Spotlight cont’d
Favourite way to relax? A random fact you’d like to share? Moments of Epiphany
and why? Who inspires you?
I love to read, mainly novels, especially anything Game of Thrones-esque. Yes, I
preferred the book series to the TV show, although I enjoyed that, too. I enjoy cy-
cling, although I am not nearly as good as Richard is. I also enjoy cooking, when I
am in the mood, and have an extensive herb garden as well as citrus trees (lemons,
limes, and I just planted a mandarin tree). Having fresh ingredients makes cooking a
lot more fun! I also enjoy spending time my with family (Richard, Alexandra (almost
7), and James (5)), of course. Richard inspires me through his utter confidence in
himself, and in me. Women seem to be prone to self-doubt in a way that it seems
like many men are not. Especially being in a male-dominated area like corporate
law, the more time that I spend in this space, the more it becomes clear to me that
there is no reason whatsoever why women’s views and conclusions, where support-
ed by careful and accurate research, are any less valid than the men’s, even though
the men might talk louder. Women should not be afraid to put themselves out there!
Even if someone disagrees with you, who cares? The conversation that develops is
how knowledge is generated.
TICLP News New executives
Assistant Professor Narelle Bedford and Assistant Professor Dr. Umair Ghori
were elected as Deputy Directors and Professor Dr. Jonathan Crowe and Associ-
ate Professor Dr. Danielle Ireland-Piper as Co-Directors.
The Winners of the 2017 Research Poster Competition ‘Control and Power’ were
announced by Assistant Professor Victoria Baumfield and Associate Professor
Danielle Ireland-Piper during Research Week (with special thanks to the judging
efforts of Assistant Professor Jodie O’Leary and Associate Professors Stuart Mur-
ray and Wayne Petherick).
Members of TICLP with winners of the Poster competition
TICLP News cont’d
UG - First Place: Lucas Flach, Faculty of Law ('The People’s Power and Control:
Australia v EU - The People’ Representation in the founding legislation of national
and transnational confederations'); Second Place: Patrick Cross, Faculty of Law
(Can Human Rights be Enforced Without Recourse to the Courts?: A Comparative
Analysis between the Constitutions of Australia and Belarus); Highly Commended:
Isabelle Silberling, Faculty of Law ('Nepal and Australia: A Constitutional Compari-
son').
Second Place UG Winner Patrick Cross (L) with Assistant Professor
Victoria Baumfield (C) and Associate Professor Danielle Ireland-Piper
(R)
Highly Commended UG Winner Isabelle Silberling (L) with Assistant
Professor Victoria Baumfield (C) and Associate Professor Danielle Ire-
land-Piper (R)
First Place UG Winner Lucas Flach (C) with Assistant Professor Victoria
Baumfield (L) and Associate Professor Danielle Ireland-Piper (R)
TICLP News cont’d
HDR - First Place: Sneha Raut, Bond Business School (Fraud – Power and Con-
trol Gone Wrong!); Equal Second Place: Michael Krakat, Faculty of Law
(Citizenship by Investment Laws); Florentina Benga, Faculty of Law (Enhancing
Public Legal Education through Access to Justice Centres in the Context of Contem-
porary Legal Education in Law Schools); Joseph Stroud, Faculty of Society and
Design (A Risk Assessment of the Impacts of Coal Seam Gas (CSG) Extraction
‘Legacy’ Wells: on Groundwater and Surface Water Systems, in Northern New
South Wales and Queensland, Australia).
First Place HDR Winner Sneha Raut (C) with Assistant Professor Victo-
ria Baumfield (L) and Associate Professor Danielle Ireland-Piper (R)
Second Equal Place HDR Winner Florentina Benga (C) with Assistant
Professor Victoria Baumfield (L) and Associate Professor Danielle Ire-
land-Piper (R)
TICLP News cont’d
STAFF - First Place: Narelle Bedford and Lisa Bonin, Faculty of Law (Public
Interest Standing: Shifting Power and Control through Access to Justice); Second
Place: Khaled Halteh, Bond Business School (Bankruptcy Prediction).
HDR News
Congratulations to the following Law students whose candidatures were success-
fully confirmed in September and October:
• Florentina Benga, PhD
• Sophia O’Brien, PhD
• Kylie Fletcher-Johnson, PhD
• Dani Larkin, PhD
• Nick Coundouris, LLM (Res)
First Place Staff Joint Winner Assistant Professor Narelle Bedford (C)
with Assistant Professor Victoria Baumfield (L) and Associate Professor
Danielle Ireland-Piper (R)
Second Place Staff Winner Khaled Halteh (C) with Assistant Professor
Victoria Baumfield (L) and Associate Professor Danielle Ireland-Piper
(R)
Faculty News
Additional Research Semesters
Congratulations to Professor Jon Crowe and Assistant Professor Umair Ghori for
their successful application for an Additional Research Semester in 2018.
Congratulations to Professor Dan Svantesson for his successful application for an
AERLP (Academic Extended Research Leave Program) in 2018.
Academic Workshop
Faculty academics and HDRs attended a lunchtime workshop on PURE—Bond’s
new research management platform, and the forthcoming new Pacific Advance plat-
form of LexisNexis in 2018.
Advance Pacific resources is available here - http://www.knowledge-network.lexisnexis.com.au/home/products/lexisadvance/
PURE training for law academics is booked in for 14 February and 21 February 2018.
Further details to be announced .
Law Research Sharepoint
A reminder that the Law Research Sharepoint site is available on and off campus
through a Bond staff email address. All current research policies and forms can be
accessed through this site. Links to research events, seminars and resources are
also available for law academics. You can access the Sharepoint site by clicking
here.
Mark Norman (LexisNexis) presented the new Pacific Advance platform
Kathryn Harris (ORS) presented an overview of PURE
Notices
PURE Public Portal
You control what is shown on your public profile by switching content on and off
through the PURE backend. Below is a link to a short 1 minute video which illustrates
how you can edit your personal profile information in order to control what can be
seen by others on the Portal, including metrics and affiliations. For example, you may
wish to turn off h-index sccopus data which undercounts law and social science cita-
tions https://vimeo.com/243209491.
Become an ARC Peer Reviewer
The Australian Research Council are currently seeking expressions of interest from
academic professionals who wish to participate in the Peer Review process by be-
coming Detailed Assessors for research project proposals received by the ARC. Be-
coming a reviewer is highly recommended as it provides invaluable insight into both
the peer-review process, as well as the research activity within your field, within Aus-
tralia.
Interested persons need to submit their expressions of interest, including a current
academic CV and a list of their top 5 publications to the Peer Review team at ARC-
[email protected]. Any questions may be submitted to the same address.
Information regarding what being an assessor entails and how to become one is
available on the ARC website Peer Review pages.
Your assistance in this matter is greatly appreciated; please do not hesitate to con-
tact [email protected] if you have any queries or concerns.
PURE-ORCID
Don’t forget to authorise the export of content to ORCID on your PURE profile, by
clicking on the hyperlink as shown below. This will allow all the information on PURE
to be pushed to ORCID automatically at intervals. The reverse is not the case; OR-
CID does not populate PURE.