List of law schools attended by Australian High Court justices
Appearance
There have been 49 men and seven women who have been appointed as justices of the High Court of Australia. Together, the judges are alumni of six Australian universities, two universities in the United Kingdom, three in the United States of America and one Barristers' Admission Board.
Australia
[edit]University of Sydney
[edit]- Sydney Law School – 20 alumni
University of Melbourne
[edit]- Melbourne Law School – 14 alumni
- Isaac Isaacs
- H. B. Higgins
- Frank Gavan Duffy
- Hayden Starke
- Owen Dixon
- John Latham
- Wilfred Fullagar
- Douglas Menzies
- Ninian Stephen
- Keith Aickin
- Daryl Dawson – also completed a Master of Laws from Yale Law School
- Kenneth Hayne – also completed a Bachelor of Civil Law from Oxford
- Geoffrey Nettle – also completed a Bachelor of Civil Law from Oxford
- Simon Steward
University of Queensland
[edit]- University of Queensland – 6 alumni
- Charles Powers
- William Webb
- Harry Gibbs
- Gerard Brennan
- Ian Callinan
- Patrick Keane – also completed a Bachelor of Civil Law from Oxford
University of Western Australia
[edit]- University of Western Australia – 5 alumni
- Ronald Wilson – also completed a Master of Laws from the University of Pennsylvania
- John Toohey
- Robert French
- Michelle Gordon
- James Edelman – also completed a Doctor of Philosophy from Oxford.
Australian National University
[edit]- Australian National University College of Law – 1 alumnus
- Stephen Gageler – also completed a Master of Laws from Harvard
United Kingdom
[edit]University of Cambridge
[edit]- University of Cambridge – 2 alumni
University of Oxford
[edit]- University of Oxford – 5 alumni
United States
[edit]Harvard University
[edit]- Harvard Law School – 1 alumnus
University of Pennsylvania
[edit]- University of Pennsylvania – 1 alumnus
Yale University
[edit]- Yale Law School – 1 alumnus
No formal law school
[edit]- New South Wales Legal Profession Admission Board – 2 alumni
- Michael McHugh
- Susan Kiefel – also completed a Master of Laws from Cambridge