Adjunct Associate Professor
Sheryl Jackson

This person does not currently hold a position at QUT.
Biography
Sheryl Jackson has a background in professional practice, particularly in the areas of:- commercial litigation
- intellectual property law
- taxation law.
Her primary research interest is the area of civil litigation.
Sheryl has:
- co-authored The Law of Caveats in Australia and New Zealand
- co-authored Civil Procedure: Commentary and Materials (currently in its fourth edition)
- authored the System@Law Litigators Toolkit, an online commentary service relating to the Uniform Civil Procedure Rules
- regularly contributed to Proctor in relation to practice and procedure
- published numerous articles and conference papers in the area of procedural law.
Sheryl has a particular interest in the role of technology in the litigation process, and has published a range of articles and papers on that topic.
Research interests
- civil procedure
- intellectual property law
- taxation law
- legal education.
Personal details
Discipline
Law
Field of Research code, Australian and New Zealand Standard Research Classification (ANZSRC), 2008
Qualifications
- LLM (University of Queensland)
- LLB(Hons) (Queensland Inst. of Technology)
Professional memberships and associations
- Queensland Law Society - Litigation and Practice Section.
Teaching
- civil procedure
- advanced civil procedure
- intellectual property law.
Selected publications
- Colbran S, Spender P, Jackson S, Douglas R, Penovic T, (2012) Civil procedure : commentary and materials, 5th Edition.
- Jackson S, (2012) Intellectual Property and Joint Ventures, Joint Ventures Law in Australia (3rd ed.), pp. 469-509.
- Cooper D, Jackson S, Mason R, Toohey M, (2011) The emergence of JD in the Australian Legal Education marketplace and its impact on academic standards, Legal Education Review, 21 (2), pp. 23-48.
- Jackson S, (2010) Court-provided trial technology: efficiency and fairness for criminal trials, Common Law World Review, 39 (3), pp. 219-249.
- Jackson S, (2009) Reflection not rejection: Harnessing the benefits of trial technology, Queensland Lawyer, 29 (3), pp. 139-157.
- Jackson S, (2008) Keeping it simple: court-provided technology brings the 'electronic trial' to the ordinary litigant, Bond Law Review, 20 (1), pp. 52-81.
- Jackson S, Pastellas J, (2008) Litigator's toolkit (Jackson and Pastellas).
- Jackson S, Garrett P, (2007) GST Implications for the Recovery of Legal Costs, Australian GST Journal, 7 (8), pp. 85-95.
- Jackson S, (2007) New Challenges for Litigation in the Electronic Age, Deakin Law Review, 12 (1), pp. 81-121.
- Colbran S, Jackson S, (1996) Caveats, Financial Times Press.
QUT ePrints
For more publications by Sheryl, explore their research in QUT ePrints (our digital repository).