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History

More than 160 years of legal scholarship

Sydney Law School has a long history of providing the best, research-led legal education in Australia.

Inaugurated in 1855, Sydney Law School was one of the first three disciplines at the University of Sydney, alongside Arts and Medicine. The Law School commenced its work in 1859, but this work in the main was examining rather than teaching.

John Henry Challis, a merchant and landowner of Potts Point, NSW left a substantial bequest of his real and personal estate to the University. As a result of this bequest, eight University chairs, including those of Law, International Law and Jurisprudence, were founded, together with a number of specific lectureships, several of them in the Law School.

In 1890 Pitt Cobbett was appointed to the first Chair of Law and became the first Dean of the Faculty. This marked the commencement of the Sydney Law School as we know it today. After Pitt Cobbett's resignation in 1910, Mr. J. B. Peden (later Sir John Peden) was appointed to the Chair of Law and became Dean of the Faculty. A second chair was created after World War I, and A H Charteris, of the University of Glasgow, was appointed Challis Professor of International Law and Jurisprudence.

The earliest lectures in the Law School, before Pitt Cobbett's arrival from England, were given on the second or the top floor of an old building called Wentworth Court, which ran from Phillip to Elizabeth Streets on the site of the former Government Insurance Office. Soon after Professor Pitt Cobbett's arrival in 1890, the Law School, with its 14 students and teaching staff of five, four of whom were part-time lecturers, moved a few doors along to 173 Phillip Street.

In 1896 the Law School moved across Phillip Street to no. 174 Selbourne Chambers, on the site of the present Selbourne Chambers. It remained there until 1913, when it moved for a year to a 'cramped and noisy' upper floor in Martin Place, while Wigram Chambers (no. 167 Phillip Street) and Barristers' Court, both of which the University had recently purchased, were being converted into University Chambers for the Law School and tenants.

Sometime later, Barristers Court was resumed and demolished for the widening of Elizabeth Street, and in 1936 the University purchased all that remained of the original site. On this block, a 13-storey building was erected and opened in 1938. It was joined to the old Phillip Street Building, and it contained a well-appointed law library occupying three floors. The rest of the space was let. In 1939 there were 288 students and a teaching staff of 17 – two professors and full-time tutor (F C Hutley, later Mr Justice Hutley of the Supreme Court of NSW), and 14 part-time lecturer

In the years immediately following World War II, there were some 1100 students in the Law School; the number fell to 650 by 1953.

During the 1950s, three further chairs of law were created and another was added in 1969. In that year the Sydney Law School moved again, this time into a building of some 16 storeys bounded by Phillip, King and Elizabeth Streets.

This was now known as the 'St James Campus'. The building contained nine lecture rooms, placed on two of the floors below street level which provided better air-conditioning control and reduced noise problems.

Student amenities included a common room, games rooms and two squash courts. The library, which occupies four floors of the building, accommodated 450 readers, half in individual carrels.

In 2009, Sydney Law School relocated to the University of Sydney's Camperdown campus, occupying the New Law Building, an award-winning complex located on Eastern Avenue.

A state-of-the-art complex for Law research and teaching, its major components include a moot court facility, law library, teaching spaces and forecourt.

In 2015, Sydney Law School officially resumed its CBD teaching activities in the University's new CBD building located at 133 Castlereagh Street, Sydney.

Sydney was the first Australian law school to admit women, and three of Australia’s six female high court judges graduated from Sydney Law School. We count among our alumni six Prime Ministers of Australia and four Chief Justices of the High Court of Australia.

We have a reputation for excellence which has been built over more than 160 years of teaching and research. We are committed to continuing to provide the best legal education for our students and leading the way in research by addressing key issues impacting both Australian and international law

  • 1890–1910:Professor Pitt Cobbett
  • 1910–1942:Professor John Peden
  • 1942–1946:Professor James Williams
  • 1946–1947:Mr Clive Teece(Acting)
  • 1947–1973:Professor Keith Shatwell
  • 1974–1977:Professor David Benjafield
  • 1978–1979:Professor Dyson Heydon
  • 1980–1985:Mr John Mackinolty
  • 1986–1989:Professor Colin Phegan
  • 1990–1992:Professor James Crawford
  • 1992–1993:Associate Professor Alex Ziegert(Acting)
  • 1993–1994:Professor Colin Phegan(Acting)
  • 1994–1997:Professor David Weisbrot
  • 1998–1999:Associate Professor Ros Atherton(Acting)
  • 1999–2002:Professor Jeremy Webber
  • 2002–2007:Professor Ron McCallum
  • 2007–2012:Professor Gillian Triggs
  • 2012–2013:Professor Greg Tolhurst(Acting)
  • 2013–2018:Professor Joellen Riley
  • 2019–2019:Professor Cameron Stewart (Acting)
  • 2019–2024:Professor Simon Bronitt
  • 2024Գ:Professor Rita Shackel(Acting)

  • 1894George Flannery
  • 1897Thomas Bavin
  • 1898John Peden
  • 1900Ernest Mitchell
  • 1903Richard Clive Teece
  • 1906Norman Rowland
  • 1907Edward Real
  • 1909Samuel Townsend
  • 1912Claude Weston
  • 1913Harold Mason
  • 1915Clive Slade
  • 1916Horace Petrie
  • 1917Neil McTague
  • 1918Herbert Evatt
  • 1921Aubrey Berne
  • 1922Percy Spender
  • 1923Philip King
  • 1924Malcolm McIntyre
  • 1925Bernard Sugarman
  • 1925Leomine Pilkington
  • 1926George Amsberg
  • 1926Garfield Barwick
  • 1927William Lieberman
  • 1928Henry Woodward
  • 1928Alfred Gain
  • 1929George Wright
  • 1930M.F. Hardie
  • 1930William Sheldon
  • 1931Kevin Ellis
  • 1932Alexander Stevens
  • 1933Edwin Hook
  • 1934Cyril Walsh
  • 1935Allan Eastman
  • 1936John Kerr
  • 1937James Massie
  • 1938Clive Weston
  • 1939Francis 'Frank' Hutley
  • 1939Jack O'Brien
  • 1940Manoel Callas
  • 1940Ronald Cary
  • 1940Kenneth Cohen
  • 1941William Shearer
  • 1941Harold Glass
  • 1942Arthur Rath
  • 1942Ewart Smith
  • 1943Raymond McKay
  • 1944Ross Waite Parsons
  • 1945David Benjafield
  • 1946James Esler
  • 1947Leslie Downer
  • 1947Kenneth Jacobs
  • 1948Dennis Mahoney
  • 1949Allan Saunders
  • 1950Robert Conacher
  • 1950Frederick Watson
  • 1951George Murray
  • 1952William Hodgekiss
  • 1953David Panckhurst
  • 1953Geoffrey Kolts
  • 1954William Deane
  • 1955Elizabeth Evatt
  • 1955Albert Lacey
  • 1956Theodore Simos
  • 1957Patrick Lane
  • 1958Roderick Meagher
  • 1959Andrew Hiller
  • 1960Geoffrey MacCormack
  • 1961Jeremy Badgery-Parker
  • 1962Donald Graham Hill
  • 1963David Harland
  • 1964James Wood
  • 1965Michael Chesterman
  • 1966Mary Gaudron
  • 1967Stephen Denning
  • 1967Andrew Wentworth Stevenson
  • 1969John Lehane
  • 1970Kenneth Wee
  • 1970Robert Forster
  • 1971JamesSpigelman
  • 1972Richard Gelski
  • 1973Christopher Penman
  • 1973Philip Ward
  • 1974Margaret Somerville
  • 1976Susan Charny
  • 1977Richard White
  • 1978Margaret Allars
  • 1979Jane Gray
  • 1980James Allsop
  • 1981Margaret Cole
  • 1982Julie Ward
  • 1983Mark Speakman
  • 1984Justin Gleeson
  • 1985Elizabeth Grinston
  • 1986Roy Williams
  • 1987Tod McGrouther
  • 1987Elizabeth Dibbs
  • 1988Margaret Mary Ryan
  • 1989Joanna Bird
  • 1990Andrew Bell
  • 1991Craig Carracher
  • 1992Simon Evans
  • 1993Jaclyn Moriarty
  • 1994Elisabeth Peden
  • 1994David Murphy
  • 1994Evan Fountain
  • 1995Joellen Riley
  • 1996Christopher Alexandrou
  • 1996Sarah Goldfinch
  • 1997Benjamin Kremer
  • 1998Michael Davis
  • 1999Thomas Riemer
  • 2000Stuart Lawrance
  • 2000Natalie Krestovsky
  • 2000Simon Fitzpatrick
  • 2001Andrew Lang
  • 2002Yane Svetiev
  • 2002Eloise Scotford
  • 2002David Thomas
  • 2003Jonathan Pickering
  • 2003Erin Walsh
  • 2004Robert Yezerski
  • 2004William Edwards
  • 2005Nicola Campion
  • 2005Caroline Spruce
  • 2006Selina Wrighter
  • 2007Sascha Morrell
  • 2007Oliver Jones
  • 2008Fiona Roughley
  • 2008Thomas Prince
  • 2008Zelie Heger
  • 2009Zachary Vermeer
  • 2009Tina Zhuo
  • 2010Jane Taylor
  • 2011Alicia Lyons
  • 2012Chelsea Tabart
  • 2012Nikki Joson
  • 2013Daniel Ward
  • 2014Kathleen Heath
  • 2016Melissa Chen
  • 2017Daniel Farinha
  • 2018Zubin Bilimoria
  • 2019Harry Stratton
  • 2020John-Patrick Asimakis
  • 2020Harrison Rogers
  • 2021Olivia Morris
  • 2021Haiqiu Zhu
  • 2022Dean Psihoyos
  • 2023Samuel Goldberg
  • 2023Aryan Mohseni
  • 2024Lachlan Muir
  • 2024Patrick Ryan
  • 2025 Julian Edwards
  • 2025Rachael Li

1924 to 2010 are available online in the library

Since 2010 are available online

JuristDiction, a magazine published annually for our alumni and the wider legal community.

Our past issues provide in-depth articles about the law, our students and alumni.

  • The future of law: an update on the New Law School Building
  • The forgotten children: exposing Australia's treatment of child refugees
  • The class of 1951

JuristDiction 2008, issue 2

  • Climate visionaries: forging legal solutions to climate change
  • Sharia law in Indonesia: understanding the world's largest Muslim nation
  • The climate warrior: a look at theAustralia Youth Climate Coalition

  • Honorary award forThe Hon Justice Arthur Robert Emmett and Mr Bruce McWilliam
  • Opening celebrations for the New Law Building on the Camperdown campus
  • Alumni achievement:His Hon Judge John North

JuristDiction 2010, Autumn

  • Social Justice Clinical Course - student activism past and present
  • Reconciliation and injustice
  • Women, crime and beyond
  • An outstanding defender and scholar
  • Should corporations engage in political activities?

JuristDiction 2010, Summer

  • 'A spiritual thing': the Sydney legal profession in the First World War
  • Regulating the development of energy resources
  • Enabling the disabled world

JuristDiction 2011, Spring

  • Vale Justice Roddy Meagher
  • Changing of the guard: Law School alumni continue to head the NSW Supreme Court
  • The Peter Nygh Hague Conference internship

JuristDiction 2011, Winter

  • A commitment to community service
  • Law and development in our times
  • Himalayan Field School on development and human rights
  • Building capacity with AusAid
  • Judicial training in the dragon kingdom of Bhutan

JuristDiction 2012, Spring

  • Healing the system: Larry Gostin, health pioneer
  • Profile: Justice Peter Garling
  • The graduating class of 1962 (Hon Michael Kirby AC CMG)

JuristDiction 2012, Winter

  • David Re - trial chamber judge
  • Syria, Libya, and the use of force under international law
  • Soldiers or assassins? America's killing of Osama Bin Laden
  • 2012 Prize Giving Ceremony and graduation party

JuristDiction 2013, Spring

  • A constitutional recipe for an Australian republic
  • Profile: Helen Irving
  • What's God got to do with it? Freedom of religion and constitution
  • Clinical legal education

JuristDiction 2014, Winter

  • Profile: Chloe Flynn
  • All the world's a stage
  • Sexting and young people
  • Wingara Mura - Bunga Barrabugu

JuristDiction 2015

  • In memoriam: we remember Katrina Dawson
  • Word beaters: our students win fourth Jessup moot title
  • Shaping the future of Indigenous law
  • Alumni achievement: a portrait of alumnus Charles Waterstreet has won the 2015 Archibald Prize.
  • Class of 1975 reunite
  • Alumna, Cat Thao Nguyen, empowered by law studies after life struggle
  • A pathway to Cambridge or Oxford.

JuristDiction 2016

  • Not guilty: the Innocence Project
  • Neurolaw in the courtroom
  • In the courts of Cambodia: alumna Hannah Solomon shares her experience
  • Law Without Walls
  • An Australian intern in London: Catherine Qu is selected to intern at the International Bar Association

JuristDiction 2017

  • A world record in the Jessup Moot
  • The alumna who is changing the world
  • Passport to Oxford: recipients explain how the experience transformed their legal careers
  • Colin Phegan Lectureship – a gift to learning
  • Young lawyers celebrated: alumni and student named in Lawyers Weekly 30 Under 30 Awards
  • Women in leadership: four alumni winners of the Lawyers Weekly Women in Law Awards

JuristDiction 2018

  • Shaking up the student law society
  • The gift that keeps on giving: Tom Yim honours former lecturer with gift that will help new generation of students
  • Women of influence: Professor Rosemary Lyster earns a spot in 2018 Australian Financial Review’s 100 Women of Influence
  • AI and the future of banking: student Isabella teaches Westpac about the role of arti

The Sydney Law School Reports were designed to inform students, graduates andsupporters of the activities occurring at the Law School at the time, and included letters from prominent members of the profession, research updates and student news.

The Law School Comfort Fund (LSCF) was established at a meeting in the Law School on 10 July 1940.

Its aim was to keep legal men and students in the Services in touch with the school and the legal professions, but the main object of the fund was to provide reading matter to those whose name was on the roll.

Explore theto learn more

In 1902, Ada Evans was the first woman to graduate with an LLB from Sydney Law School. Over 120 years on, we still celebrate Ada and all of the changemakers that have followed in her footsteps.

Ada Evans

In 1899, Ada Evans was the first woman to enrol for the Bachelor of Laws at Sydney Law School. Submitting her application while the Dean was on leave, she was accepted, despite being told that “she did not have the physique for law and would find medicine more suitable.” In 1902, she made history, and became the first woman in Australia to graduate with an LLB. She continued to lead the way for women in law. In 1921 she was the first woman admitted to the NSW Bar - after 19 years of persistence.

Her Excellency, Margaret Beazley

Admitted to the legal profession in 1975,Margaret Beazleyhas since achieved notable firsts. In 1993, she was the first woman exclusivelyappointed as a judge of the Federal Court, then in 1996, she was the first woman appointed to the NSW Court of Appeal, becoming its first female president in 2013. Currently, she is enjoying her latest role, as 39th (2nd female) Governor of NSW.

Justice jacqueline Gleeson SC

In 2020, the Masters of Law graduate, solicitor, barrister and Federal Court judgeJacqueline Gleesonwas elevated to the highest legal decision-making body in the country, becoming the sixth woman to serve on High Court.

Professor Barbara McDonald

After graduating with BA and LLB,Barbara McDonaldhas taken on many roles throughout her legal career - working as a commercial lawyer, consultant, author, editor, program director of the Law School in Europe program and professor. She recently served as a Commissioner of the Australian Law Reform Commission in Sydney where she headed the Inquiry into Serious Invasions of Privacy in the Digital Era.

Mary Gaudron QC

's career has been filled with "firsts". In 1972, she was the first woman to be appointed to the Council of the New South Wales Bar and used her position to successfully advocate for the Equal Pay Case (1972). Less than a decade later, she was the first female Solicitor-General in Australia and the first female Queen’s Counsel in NSW, and went on to become the first female Justice of the High Court of Australia - playing a role in thehistoric 1992 Mabo decision.

Female firsts
Ada Evans

First female law graduate

First female admitted to the NSW Bar

Marie Byles First female solicitor in NSW
Sybil Morrsion First female barrister in NSW
Jean Malor First female to graduate with first class honours
Elizabeth Evatt

First female student to win the University Medal for Law

Youngest law student ever accepted

First female deputy president of the Commonwealth Conciliation and Arbitration Commission

Jane Mathews (LLB 1962)

1977: First female crown prosecutor in NSW

1980: First female judge of the NSW District Court

1987: First female judge of the NSW Supreme Court

Mahla Pearlman (LLB 1960)

1981: First female President of the Law Society of NSW

1989:First female President of the Law Council of Australia

1992: First female President of the NSW Land and Environment Court

Deidre O'Connor (LLB 1974)

1990:First femalejudge of the Federal Court of Australia

1990:President of the Australian Industrial Relations Commission

Ruth McColl (LLB 1975) 1999: First femalePresident of NSW Bar Association
Sally Dowling (LLB 1995) 2021:First femaleNSW Director of Public Prosecutions