13th Australian Dispute Resolution Research Network Roundtable

27-28 November 2025 Monash University

Call for Paper Proposals

The Australasian Dispute Resolution Research Network is pleased to be hosting its 13th research roundtable on 27-28 November 2025 at Monash University Clayton campus, Melbourne. The roundtable is supported by the Faculty of Law at Monash University and the Australian Centre for Justice Innovation.

The roundtables are designed to encourage a collaborative and supportive research environment in which papers are work-shopped and discussed in detail. Papers in draft form are distributed one month ahead of time to participants, to enable thoughtful and constructive quality feedback.

We welcome proposals that consider dispute resolution from a scholarly, critical and/or empirical perspective. Topics can be addresses for any disciplinary perspective and we are especially interested in interdisciplinary approaches to dispute resolution. We particularly encourage submissions from postgraduate students and early career researchers. All proposals will be considered. Papers must not have been published or submitted for publication, as the focus is work in progress.

There will be a limited number of papers accepted for inclusion in the roundtable discussions. A panel will select roundtable papers from abstracts submitted. The aim is to be as inclusive as time and numbers allow. The following selection criteria will be applied:

  • Papers take a scholarly, critical and/or empirical perspective on an area of dispute resolution;
  • The roundtable will include a spread of participants across stages of career; and
  • A well-balanced range of work will be presented at the roundtable to provide diversity, to develop the field and to enable cohesive discussion.

Participation is on a self-funded basis.

We will also be asking you to draft a short (1,000 words max) blog post about your paper prior to the roundtable. Our blog reaches over 17,000 individuals per year and has over 25,000 hits – so your blog will be widely read. You will have a chance to fix up your blog post after the roundtable in case you’d like to make any adjustments after feedback.

On the day, speakers are given up to 30 minutes for presentation, with 30 minutes for feedback and discussion. Two primary commentators will be appointed for each paper.

Attendance at the Round Table is only open to individuals who are contributing to the scholarly discussions by presenting a paper, or commentating and/or chairing a session.

Deadline for paper proposals: 30 September 2025.

(300 word maximum plus short bio, to https://forms.gle/sNfifQPx8TrJG8cD9 or follow this link to our Google Form)

We will have rolling acceptances for papers.

Draft (full) papers + blog post due: 10 November 2025 (to send to participants mid Nov.)

For further information, please contact:

Conference Convenors and 2025 Network Presidents:

Becky Batagol and Jackie Weinberg via adrresearchnetwork@gmail.com (monitored twice weekly)

About the Australasian Dispute Resolution Research Network

The Australasian Dispute Resolution Research Network brings together leading dispute resolution scholars and provides a collaborative environment to foster, nurture and enrich high quality research and scholarship. The Network is inclusive and forward-looking and seeks to bring together emerging, mid-career and established scholars to build excellence in the field and provide peer support. Network activities are expressly designed to provide a supportive and collegial presentation environment in which meaningful discussion and constructive feedback is provided to the presenter.

Network activities include maintaining the ADR Research Network blog at www.adrresearch.net on Twitter and conducting annual scholarly round tables of work in progress since 2012.

Guest blog post proposals are always welcome. Contact Blog Editors in Chief, Sam Houssain and Milan A. Nitopi.

Membership of Australasian Dispute Resolution Research Network

We don’t like hierarchies or unnecessary administration, so we don’t have any membership list or legal organisational framework.

The way to become a member of the ADR Research Network is to subscribe to the blog. This is our primary means of communication.

Subscription will mean that every time a post is made on the blog you will receive a notification alert to your email address. Other ways to follow blog activity is through Facebook ADR Research Network page and Linked In discussion group but engagement on these platforms is not necessary to keep track of blog activity.

Join the discussion, speak within our ‘Town Hall’

We welcome and encourage you all to join our recently established LinkedIn discussion group.

Many of you may already be subscribed and are familiar with this Australian Dispute Resolution Research Network Blog. For those newcomers, this is a place where us practitioners, professionals, researchers, academics and students alike can collaborate and share our ideas on all things relating to dispute resolution, ideas of which, reach over 17,000 individuals per year and has over 25,000 hits.

The LinkedIn discussion group is a relatively new forum which has been created to provide us all a space to continue discussing our ideas and thoughts as well as to gain a further reach to those who may not be subscribed to this Blog. The discussion group is much like a ‘town hall’ rather than an official publishing forum. It is a place where you may speak freely of your ideas and thoughts relating to the topics of concern, but we ask kindly that you do not promote your commercial practices in law or dispute resolution and that you credit any authors where relevant. The discussion group follows the same guidelines here on our Blog.

To view or join the LinkedIn discussion group, you will be required to create or sign in to your LinkedIn account. For those who may not be familiar with LinkedIn, it is a social platform that is designed to connect professionals and peers to network and develop career opportunities. It is a great platform for practitioners, academics, and researchers to keep up to date with developments in their field as well as students and newly established professionals to get a running-start to their career.

Following the publishing of an article on this Blog, we encourage authors to post something brief in the LinkedIn discussion group. This allows a further reach to readers who may not be subscribed to this Blog. Some things to consider including in your LinkedIn post are relevant hashtags, appropriate emojis, and of course, the link to your blog!

We encourage all to engage, contribute, and participate in discussions with other members and posts, whether that is here on this Blog, the discussion group, Facebook Page at “ADR Research Network” or X (formerly Twitter) @ADRResearch.

For enquires, more information, or if you are interested in publishing an article on our Blog, please contact our Editors in Chief, Sam Houssain and Milan A. Nitopi.

Blogging Basics for Beginners: Or, how to write a really good academic blog post

In this post, I set out what I have learned about writing a really good academic or research blog post. It is increasingly important to present academic research to the broader public. That requires a special way of writing about research.

 I am a legal academic at Monash University and I am a regular blogger and author for academic commentary site The Conversation. For the past three years I have been editor of this Australian Dispute Resolution Network blog and I encourage and require my undergraduate law students to write for the public in the blog format.

This post has been written in conjunction with the Australian Dispute Resolution Network’s 5th annual workshop in Hobart from 9-11 December 2016 at the University of Tasmania. This piece has been posted during my session about academic blogging, to demonstrate how easy it is.

 

artist-barbara-horsley-involves-chloe-stout-in-adding-a-few-brush-strokes-to-the-old-post-office-at-the-australianitalian-festival-in-ingham-queensland-2013

Artist Barbara Horsley involves Chloe Stout in adding a few brush strokes to ‘The Old Post Office’ at the Australian-Italian Festival in Ingham, Queensland, 2013, Scragg, Sarah, Courtesy John Oxley Library, State Library of Queensland

 

Why Blog Research?

All academics need to be able to write about their research in simple and non-technical language for the broader public. Blogging is also a great way for students and practitioners to present their work to a broader audience.

In this blog we have already set out the Top 6 ways that Twitter can help your research.

Blogging is a great way of sharing your research with a more wide-ranging audience than a typical peer-reviewed academic journal allows. The ubiquity of neo-liberalism has meant that those working at higher education institutions today need to demonstrate how they have contributed to the knowledge economy.

As impact and engagement are increasingly becoming important measures of research productivity at Australian universities, blogging allows academics to increase the exposure of their research and to develop their profile as a public commentator.

But the real reason that I blog as a scholar whose salary is paid by Australian taxpayers, is that it feels like the right way to give back.

Through my legal research I have learned wondrous things about the impact of law upon everyday lives. Explaining what I have learned and why it is important to the people directly affected by law and legal process can help to give people understanding and choice and it can help towards them achieving that elusive goal, access to justice.

Start by Looking at Other Academic Blogs

Research blogging is a unique genre. Lots of students and academics I know find it hard to know where to start.

I think the best way to learn about how to write a blog post is to read lots of high quality research blogs. The gold standard is academic commentary site, The Conversation, which started in Australia in 2011 and which has presence now in the US, South Africa, the UK and France. The Conversation was developed with the aim of helping academics to present their research to improve the quality of public discourse. In my experience of publishing with that site, although they can be tricky to get published in, the advice of the editors on how to present my research has informed how I write outside the blog genre too.

If you are interested in looking at Australian law blogs, here’s one great aggregate and another from my Monash colleague Melissa Castan. Specifically on the non-adversarial theme is this ADR Research Network blog and the Mainstreaming Therapeutic Jurisprudence blog. For research-specific blogs I like the Thesis Whisperer for postgraduate researchers and their supervisors, as well as its more grown -up sibling, the Research Whisperer.

There are other places where people have written well about academic/research based blogging. Here’s a great introduction to academic blogs by Professor Patrick Dunleavy at London School of Economics.

There are some other interesting links on writing research/academic blogs and the blog genre: from the Thesis Whisperer about the value of blogging for PhD students, the Research Whisperer (ostensibly about science blogging but really relevant to any discipline) and this one about how to start writing a research blog post.

What Should I Write About?

In working out what to write about, you can take Dunleavy’s approach in this post and write a summary of a paper, article, chapter or essay you have already (mostly) completed. Dunleavy argues that after you publish an academic journal article, you should write a post summarising it.

Academically a blogpost boosts citations for the core article itself. It advertises your journal article in ways that can get it far more widely read than just pushing the article out into the ether to sink or swim on its own.

Dunleavy’s argument could apply to a thesis chapter, a conference paper or to a research essay completed for academic coursework.

I prefer to start with a blog and then turn the post into something that counts more readily as academic productivity.  Writing a blog post is often a great way to capture an idea quickly. Many of us in the ADR Research Network have found that our posts on this blog have become the basis for a later academic project, whether that be a conference paper, an empirical research project, a collaboration between researchers or an academic journal article. In a busy academic life, it is good to make one piece of work count twice, and blogging allows for that.

Another trick is to ask someone else to write a post as a guest blogger. That adds variety to the range of posts on a particular blog and helps ensure that posts are regular.

Tone and Form

A blog post should be written differently to an academic journal article. It needs to be understood by a non-expert audience, it needs to keep people engaged when they could easily switch to social media entertainments, it needs a different way of referencing sources and needs to look good on a screen (rather than on a page).

A good length for an academic blog post is 800-1500 words. It can definitely be shorter but any longer than that will lose readers part way through and will be too long on the page.

Don’t use technical language, or if you must, you need to explain it simply. I try to think that I am blogging for an interested, intelligent but non-specialist audience.

Paragraphs should be short, just a few sentences at most. Otherwise, your paragraphs will look too long on the page.

Rather than footnotes you should use hyperlinks. Blogging raises the moral problem of so much publicly -funded academic writing being hidden behind publisher’s paywalls. Assume your readers aren’t connected to universities and can’t afford to pay journal subscription fees. Hyperlinks should be to open source material that is not behind a paywall.

Grab their Attention with a Photo

A post should start with a hook that grabs readers’ attention. You can do this with a cracker opening line or you can use a picture.

I find that a great photo enlivens a post, and encourages readers to look at the piece. Especially with blogging services such as WordPress which send an email out to blog subscribers, a photo looks really good on the email that gets sent out.

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Creative commons. Source 

 

When using photos online, it is important not to breach copyright restrictions. You could use a photo that you have taken yourself or you could use photos that are open access/licensed under Creative Commons or which are out of copyright.

All of the State Libraries in Australia have picture libraries that are searchable and which have photos with minimal copyright restrictions. (Always check the terms of use of the photo in the library record when you search and attribute as required). I love using old photos with some kind of tangential relevance only to the post. Or you can check out compfight.

Happy blogging!