Called to the Bar in 2005, Penny Thew is highly regarded for her expertise in all aspects of employment and discrimination law, contractual disputes and restraints of trade. With over 23 years’ experience in advocacy, advising and dispute resolution, Doyle’s Guide has consistently recognised Penny as a recommended leading employment law barrister.
Penny is a Graduate Member of the Australian Institute of Directors (GAICD) and is a member of the Chartered Institute of Arbitrators (CIArb). Penny appears in all courts and is admitted to appear in the High Court of Australia. In 2024, Penny was awarded Commercial Barrister of the Year 2023 in the CorporateLivewire Global Awards.
In addition to her practise as a barrister, since 2017 Penny has been appointed a part-time Tribunal Member of the NSW Civil and Administrative Tribunal, having been reappointed for further terms in 2019 and 2024. Penny has performed a secondment with the International Labour Organisation in Geneva, Switzerland, tutored in Civil Practice for the Law Faculty of the University of Technology, Sydney and was retained as the employment law legal adviser to the NSW Bar Association. In 2015, Penny drafted the Bar Association’s inaugural Model Best Practice Guidelines on the prevention of bullying, harassment and discrimination, endorsed by Bar Council and adopted by over 51% of the NSW private Bar.
Prior to being called to the Bar, Penny was a policy advisor to the Australian Sex Discrimination Commissioner (with what is now the Australian Human Rights Commission) and practised for over five years as a solicitor in employment and workplace relations law.
Penny is regularly called upon to deliver seminars and papers on employment and discrimination law compliance issues, including for the NSW Bar Association and the Law Society of NSW, and has co-authored submissions for the Bar Association and the Law Council of Australia to the Productivity Commission, the Australian Human Rights Commission and to the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Legal and Constitutional Affairs.
Gerard Ryan graduated from the University of Sydney with First Class Honours degrees in Economics and Law and a Masters Degree in Law with Honours. He was admitted as a solicitor in June 1991 and was admitted to partnership in July 2000. He was Dean of the School of Law Sydney from 2008 to 2012 inclusive.Professor Ryan's expertise includes the documentation of electricity derivative transactions using the International Swaps and Derivatives Association framework; competition law issues in the energy sector; the documentation of large energy infrastructure projects; greenhouse gas regulatory schemes; renewable energy power stations; carbon trading; and regulatory issues in the National Electricity Market. Professor Ryan has advised some of the major generators, retailers and network operators in the National Electricity Market, as well as various government and regulatory bodies. He has extensive experience as a speaker at industry seminars and, most significantly, in the recruitment, training and mentoring of young lawyers within the Sydney legal profession.