A Bachelor of Economics student from The University of Queensland was recently named the regional winner for Oceania in the Undergraduate Awards Program 2017.
Scholarships and prizes transform lives, assisting some of our most talented, determined and hard-working students to achieve academic excellence by providing the financial support they need to put their studies first.
How the law can safeguard victims from technology-facilitated abuse will be the focus of Tuesday’s panel discussion and mini hackathon at the Organised Crime and Corruption Forum run by The University of Queensland’s TC Beirne School of Law and the Australian Institute for Business and Economics (AIBE).
A software service start-up business that accelerates commercial property contract negotiations has taken out the People’s Choice award in the Westpac Innovation Challenge. Blenktech, which is being developed through start-up accelerator ilab at UQ, is the brainchild of University of Queensland graduate and lawyer-turned-entrepreneur, Alastair Blenkin.
What do slush funds, smart home safety, smuggling and sport have in common? All will be put under the legal microscope and scrutinised at the Organised Crime and Corruption Forum (18-21 September) organised by The University of Queensland’s TC Beirne School of Law and the Australian Institute for Business and Economics (AIBE).
An innovative research partnership between The University of Queensland and the Port of Brisbane has been honoured with a 2017 UQ Partners in Research Excellence Award (PIREA).
Representatives of eight leading management consulting firms were wowed by some of The University of Queensland’s top student talent at a networking breakfast last week.
The TC Beirne School of Law's Professor Heather Douglas and UQ Business School's Professor Charmine Härtel have been admitted to The Academy of Social Sciences in Australia in recognition of their outstanding research contributions to their disciplines.
According to a recent story in The Courier-Mail, UQ ranks among the top 21 Queensland and eastern seaboard universities for graduate employability. The story showcases the BEL Faculty’s achievements in this area, including its dedicated Student Employability Team and its strong full-time graduate employment rate.
An “exceptional” University of Queensland student who founded his own not-for-profit organisation received a perfect score at the 2017 Lawyers Weekly Australian Law Awards.
Whether you are a graduate entering the workforce for the first time or a mature student embarking on a new career, starting a new job can be a daunting prospect. Even if you have the qualifications, you may be unsure what is involved in the role on a day to day basis, whether you will fit in with the culture or if you have made the right decision.
Over 100 mentors and mentees from The University of Queensland’s BEL Career Mentoring Program came together for the first time at the Semester 2, 2017 network breakfast last week.
Zoe Brereton was chosen as the New Colombo Plan Fellow to India in 2014. During her time in New Delhi, she interviewed women, their families and police, giving her work an empirical base and paving the way for future research and presented her research at several international workshops.
Forecasting volatility in the fossil fuel market is a lot like forecasting the weather, according to a University of Queensland PhD candidate who won her faculty Three Minute Thesis competition last week.
The UQ Idea Hub is encouraging students to change the current employment model by creating their own jobs and, in the process, creating jobs for others.