Biography
Born:
30 September 1946; married with two school-age children. British and
Australian national.
Education:
Sydney University BA, LLB (Hons); Honorary Doctor of Laws
Oxford University BCL (Rhodes Scholar, 1970)
Professional:
- Admitted as a barrister, Middle Temple, 1973
- Queens Counsel, 1988
- Founder and Head, Doughty Street Chambers, 1990 - present
- Assistant Recorder, 1993; Recorder, 1999
- Master, Middle Temple, 1998
- Appeal Judge, UN Special Court for Sierra Leone, 2002-2007
- President of Court, December, 2002 - March, 2004
- Distinguished Jurist Member, United Nations Internal Justice Council,
2008-2012
Practice:
Appearance as leading counsel in over 200 reported cases, many in the
European Court of Human Rights, the House of Lords, the Court of
Appeal, the High Court and the Privy Council, with appearances in
the Courts of Appeal of Singapore, Trinidad, the Eastern Caribbean,
Malawi, Florida and appearances in various courts in Australia, New
Zealand, Fiji, Mauritius and Malaysia Anguilla, Antigua and in the
Revolutionary Military Tribunal of Mozambique. These cases have usually
involved human rights and relate to international, constitutional
and media law.
Academic:
Visiting professorships at Universities of Warwick and New South Wales;
currently visiting professor in human rights law at Queen Mary College,
University of London. (Inaugural Lecture, 2004) Media law lectures
include Bernard Simons Lecture (1997), Kapila Lecture (1997), Goodman
Lecture (1999), World Bank Lecture on media and judiciary (Washington,
2000), Commonwealth Legal Conference (1999, 2003 and 2005), September
11 memorial symposium, University of Connecticut (2004); International
Judicial Colloquy, Stanford University (2005), Keynote address at
Cornell Law School symposium, “Milosevic and Saddam on Trial” (February,
2005) published in Cornell Law Journal (Issue 3, Volume 5), "Nurenburg
: The legend and the legacy", Jackson Centre / Fridonia University,
New York.
Books:
- The Statute of Liberty: How Australians can take back their rights (Vintage, 2009)
- Media Law (first published 1984; 5th Edition, Penguin, 2002
Sweet & Maxwell
2007, Penguin 2008)
- Crimes Against Humanity - The Struggle
for Global Justice (Allen
Lane, 1999; US edition, New Press, 2000; 3rd edition 2006;
published in six
foreign language editions)
- The Justice Game (Chatto 1999, Vintage paperback, over 100,000
copies sold)
- Freedom, the Individual and the Law (Penguin 1989;1993)
- People Against the Press (Quartet, 1983, a Report of a committee
on the investigation of public complaints against newspapers)
- Obscenity (Wiedenfeld, 1979: analysis of standards of taste
and decency in the media)
- Geoffrey Robertson’s Hypotheticals
- More Geoffrey Robertson Hypotheticals
- Does Dracula Have AIDS? (three books published between 1985
and 1990 by the Australian Broadcasting Commission, containing
transcripts
of
television programs)
- The Tyrannicide Brief (Chatto, 2005),
Vintage paperback, 2006
- Geoffrey Robertson presents – The Levellers (Verso, 2007)
NGO’s:
- Executive Member of JUSTICE
- Director, Institute of Contemporary Art (1989-97)
- Trustee, Capital Cases Trust (a charity)
Appointments:
- Consultant to Australian Government on defamation law reform, 1984
- Led human rights missions for Amnesty International to South Africa
(1983, 1986, 1988), Vietnam (1989) and for Jan Hus Foundation to Czechoslovakia
(1984, 1987). - Led British Bar and Law Society mission to Malawi (1990).
- Retained by Commonwealth Secretariat to draft new constitution for
Seychelles (1989)
- Appointed by President of Antigua as Counsel assisting Royal Commission
into gun-running to Medallin Drugs Cartel (1990); in consequence called
to assist the U.S. Senate enquiry into illegal traffic in conventional
weapons (1991)
- Retained by Government of Malawi to advise on prosecution of Hastings
Banda and others, and to lead for Crown in Malawi Court of Appeal (1996-7)
- Appointed by Government of Trinidad to draft green paper on Reform
of Media Law (1998)
- Appointed by Government of Mauritius to draft new media laws (1999)
- Appointed as counsel to lord Mackay of Clashfern, Inquiry into the
Commission into the Administration of Justice, Trinidad and Tobago
(2000)
- Appeal Judge, UN Special Court for Sierra Leone (2002-2007)
- United
Nations Internal Justice Council (2008-present)
Media:
Writer and presenter, ‘Tree of Liberty’ (Granada, 1981);
chairman, ‘You the Jury’ (BBC Radio 4, 1982-7); presenter
of many ‘Hypotheticals’ for programs Granada, BBC, Australian
Broadcasting Corporation; CBS and TV New Zealand; Presenter of “The
World this Week” (Channel 4, 1987); writer and narrator of several
television and radio documentaries for BBC and of 44 Days (ABC Television,
1992)
In recent years, clients represented in court include: the Chief Justice
of Singapore (impeachment proceedings); CBS “Sixty Minutes” (police
demand for evidence); Rockstar (attempt to ban Manhunt II); Wang Yam
(Old Bailey murder trial); Dow Jones (The Wall Street Journal v Jameel
libel action); The Tasmanian Aboriginal Centre (against the Natural
History Museum); The Sunday Telegraph (the Gaddafi libel action), Forbes
Magazine (the Berezovsky libel actions), the New York Times, Time and
Fortune Magazines and Barrons magazine. Since 1986, Commonwealth counsel
for Dow Jones Inc. representing the European and Asian Wall Street
Journal and the Far Eastern Economic Review in Singapore, Malaysia,
Hong Kong, Australia and UK. Significant cases include Jameel v Wall
Street Journal (public interest defence to libel), Gutnik v Dow Jones
(jurisdiction over internet defamation) ex parte Randall (Washington
Post: war reporter’s privilege) Goodwin v UK (European Court
upholds right of journalists to protect sources), Bowman v UK (European
Court requires liberalising of UK election law restrictions on media),
Gay News (Blasphemy), National Theatre (Romans in Britain Prosecution),
Salman Rushdie (Sedition), Shayler (House of Lords decision on official
secrets), Represented ITV at Hutton enquiry.
In 1992 received a BAFTA award nomination for play ‘The Trials
of Oz’ (BBC2, “Performance” series) and in 1993 a ‘Freedom
of Information’ award for writing and broadcasting. Delivered
the Grierson lecture on perceptions of reality in film and television
(1987). Devised the National Film Theatre season ‘Court on Screen’ (October
2000). Various lectures for Royal Television Society and at Edinburgh
Television Festival.
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