recent publications + research

Journal Articles

Tegan Cohen, ‘Conceptualising Voter Privacy in the Age of Data-Driven Political Campaigning’ (2024) 50(2) Monash University Law Review. https://doi.org/10.26180/27330276.v1.

Tegan Cohen & Nicolas P. Suzor, ‘Contesting the Public Interest in AI Governance’ (2024) 13(3) Internet Policy Review. https://doi.org/10.14763/2024.3.1794.

Mark Burdon, Tegan Cohen, Josh Buckley & Michael Milford, ‘From Object Obfuscation to Contextually-Dependent Identification: Enhancing Automated Privacy-Protection in Street Level Image Platforms (SLIPs)’ (2024) 33(2) Information & Communications Technology Law 198. https://doi.org/10.1080/13600834.2024.2321052.

Tegan Cohen, ‘Regulating Manipulative Artificial Intelligence’ (2023) 20(1) SCRIPTed 203. https://doi.org/10.2966/scrip.200123.203.

Tegan Cohen, ‘The Political Exemption: A Justifiable Invasion of Privacy in the Political Sphere?’ (2021) 44(2) University of New South Wales Law Journal 584.

Mark Burdon & Tegan Cohen, ‘Modulation Harms and The Google Home’ (2021) 19(2) Surveillance & Society 154. https://doi.org/10.24908/ss.v19i2.14299.

Conference Papers. Workshops. Presentations.

Tegan Cohen, ‘Rent Tech, Emerging Regulation and the Right to Adequate Housing’, Australasian Housing Researchers Conference (AHRC) 2025: Housing at a crossroad: wealth, inequality and housing futures (University of Sydney, 18 – 21 February 2025).

Tegan Cohen, ‘Voter Privacy under Australian Law’, 2023 Australian Political Science Association Conference: Crisis to Complexity (University of Sydney).

Tegan Cohen, ‘Algorithmic Fairness in the Private Rental Sector’, 2023 Emerging Scholars Workshop, AI + Society, Shaping AI for Just Futures (University of Ottawa Centre for Law, Technology & Society).

Tegan Cohen, ‘Reimagining Purpose Limitations in Platform Environments’, 2022 Reimagining Platforms Symposium (University of Edinburgh).

Mark Burdon & Tegan Cohen, ‘Rethinking Platform Power’, 2021 Privacy Law Scholars Conference (Georgetown University).

Media.

Tegan Cohen,Why are political parties allowed to send spam texts? And how can we make them stop?’, 29 April 2025, The Conversation.

Veronica Lenard, ‘The 24-year-old rule that lets politicians use your data however they want’, 10 April 2025, SBS News.

Simon Elvery and Teresa Tan, You read the terms and conditions, right?’, 27 February 2025, ABC News.

How Can We Better Regulate Digital Platforms?’, Big Ideas (ABC Radio National, 16 November 2022).