Pre-judicial career Keane was admitted as a Solicitor and Barrister of the
Supreme Court of Queensland in 1976 and went to the bar, as a Barrister of the Supreme Court of Queensland, in 1977. Keane published a number of articles and has been outspoken on the quality of legislative drafting. During 1990–1992, he was the Deputy Chairman of the Queensland Law Reform Commission. In 2011, he condemned the "volume and complexity of federal laws", telling the
Australian Financial Review that "opening the tax act is like entering the door to a parallel universe".
Judicial career In 2005, Keane was appointed a Judge of Appeal of the Court of Appeal of the Supreme Court of Queensland, the highest court in that state. On 10 February 2010, Commonwealth Attorney-General
Robert McClelland announced that Keane would be appointed as the next Chief Justice of the
Federal Court of Australia. Keane took up that role on 22 March 2010. On 8 June 2015, he was named a
Companion of the Order of Australia for eminent service to the law and to the judiciary, through contributions to improved legal and public administration, as an advocate for increased access to justice, to ethical standards, and to a range of professional organisations. Keane became the 50th Justice appointed to the High Court.
Court of Final Appeal (Hong Kong) In 2023, Keane was nominated as a non-permanent judge at the age of 70. The appointment comes after two other foreign non-permanent judges resigned from the positions after citing issues with the government crackdown on freedoms in the region. He remained in the position, along with other Australian judges
William Gummow, and
James Allsop, after British judge
Jonathan Sumption resigned, criticising the judiciary of Hong Kong after 14 prominent democratic activists were convicted for
subversion. ==Personal life==