About



Lawyer and researcher working at the intersection of critical jurisprudence and digital media.

Julian’s work explores questions of justice, relationality, and legal pluralism through video games, visual media, and collaborative design. They draw on feminist, queer, and decolonial methods to think withβ€”and againstβ€”systems of governance and meaning-making.

Julian is an Affiliate Member of the ARC Centre of Excellence for Automated Decision-Making & Society, where they work on the Australian Ad Observatory project.

Julian also practices as a competition and consume
r lawyer. They have worked across corporate and public interest law, and have taught media studies at universities.


Phd Candidate
Melbourne Law School

Lawyer
Allens

Research Areas
  1. Critical Legal Theory
  2. Decolonial Jurispudence
  3. Video Game Studies
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Video Games as Minor Jurisprudence

Collaborative Game Design and Legal Pluralism in Australia

Julian’s PhD project explores how video games can help foster productive sites of encounter for understanding legal pluralism in Australia. Focussing on collaborative video game design as a creative method, the project evaluates how video games and intereractive digital media can help us teach, learn and imagine decolonised law.