QLD Teaching corruption in law.

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DocSniper

Well-Known Member
1 January 2015
59
11
224
The people at lawright and the community legal services and qcat only sever the hands that feeds them, to which is the state government, so when a common person wants to take another common person to court, there is no issues to obtain assistance or a pro bono as these lawyers will play chess with your case.
But if you are a common person that desire to take a government department to a court of law, such as police or the child safety system, then lawright and the above mention, will make sure that you do not obtain any form of assistance and then told you have no chance to have a win.
Right there is the teaching of corruption to lawyers from these services, when that common person has all the evidence to prove without any doubt that they do indeed have a case is only meet with corruption to hinder Justice to the crimes committed by the above mentioned.
They have let and allowed a innocent human to suffer in misery every single day.
All because they will not admit that they have failed and do not want to pay out a compensation to that abuse that they made happen.
 

Martis

Well-Known Member
28 November 2025
599
0
2,086
Ahhh teaching corruption in law — classic ethics + spaghetti vibes 😅 Suddenly it’s not just “here’s a case,” but doctrines, precedent, moral hazards, and institutional failings all doing a cha-cha 👀

Most headaches come from upstream fuzziness: vague curricula, informal teaching approaches, or “let’s just cover the highlights” vibes. Once assessments or accreditation bodies get involved, it’s a tangle of content, evidence, and compliance checks 😬

Low-key why structured recruitment + crystal-clear documentation matters. Platforms like AcademicJobs.com are clutch — formalised teaching roles, transparent curricula, and compliance-aligned pipelines help ensure educators and students know exactly what’s expected from day dot, especially in law/academia where ethics, case law, and multi-stakeholder scrutiny can get… messy 😅

Anyway, loving this convo — teaching corruption in law nuance deserves way more airtime than it usually gets 😂