Dr Bateman leads multi-jurisdictional projects on the legal regulation of public and private finance, with a special focus on central banking, sovereign debt markets, digital currencies and sustainable investing. His recent engagements with central banks and financial regulators include:
Dr Bateman also leads research projects on the regulation of artificial intelligence in collaboration with computer science experts and public/private sector organisations. Select law/tech partners include:
Appointments
Significant research publications
Research biography
Dr Bateman researches and writes on legal dimensions of finance, artificial intelligence and constitutionalism.
His research has been awarded numerous prizes, including the 2020 Yorke Prize by the University of Cambridge for his work on public finance and constitutionalism.
Research projects & collaborations
Dr Bateman is working on a broad-range of interdisciplinary projects with international and domestic scholars.
Law and finance
Dr Bateman was recently a Co-Investigator on the "Legal and Economic Conceptions of Money" project funded by the Economic and Social Research Council (UK)'s "Rebuilding Macroeconomics" Initiative. The team is led by Prof Rosa Lastra (QMUL) and the other team members are Dr Jason Allen (HU Berlin), Mr Simon Gleeson (Clifford Chance), Dr Michael Kumhoff (Bank of England), Prof Saule Omarova (Cornell): https://www.rebuildingmacroeconomics.ac.uk/legal-and-economic.
Dr Bateman has recently concluded a major research project on the constitutional dimensions of public finance in the UK, Canada, Australia and elsewhere in the Anglophone Commonwealth. His book, Public Finance and Parliamentary Constitutionalism (Cambridge University Press, UK) presents the findings of that project.
Dr Bateman is also a Team Member of the multi-disciplinary project "FA Mann and his contribution to English, German, European, and International Law" funded by the German Research Foundation.
Artificial intelligence and law
During 2020-24, Dr Bateman is a Chief Investigator on the ANU Grand Challenge Humanising Machine Intelligence: a multi-year interdiscplinary research project (including computer scientists, mathematicians, philosophers, sociologists, psychologists and lawyers) aimed at developing democratically legitimate machine intelligence.
Over 2020-21, he was co-leading (with Associate Professor Julia Powles, University of Western Australia) the first major project to formulate model legal frameworks for the regulation of artificial intelligence in the public sector. The project was funded by the global-philanthropy and research funding body, The Minderoo Foundation.
Dr Bateman is also collaborating with computer science experts in designing ethical and lawful algorithmic decision systems, particularly the peak Australian non-profit AI research organisation: The Gradient Institute.
Grants
Consultancies
Dr Bateman has been retained as an independent expert by government agencies on issues relating to the legal regulation of automation and artificial intelligence.
Dr Bateman has also provided legal and policy advice on complex administrative and constitutional law matters, as well as issues concerning public finance and the operations of central banks.
Books & edited collections
Refereed journal articles
Book chapters
Conference papers & presentations
Government submissions
Other
Currently supervising
Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
Topic: Legal Method, Cartels and Public Monopolies: A View From the High Court 1908 - 1948
PhD supervision
Dr Bateman is keen to supervise research students in his areas of research interest: particularly projects orientated towards critical and inter-disciplinary approaches to law and economics/finance/technology/public administration.
Prospective research students are advised to email Dr Bateman directly with a proposed title, provisional bibliography and CV.
Honours thesis supervision
Dr Bateman usually takes two LLB/JD honours students each year and will supervise projects in administrative law, constitutional law, law and economics/finance and law and technology. Students are advised to contact Dr Bateman with a formal proposal, provisional bibliography and writing timetable (at least) 8 months in advance of their proposed start date.