Index
- November 2024 4
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- July 2024 2
- June 2024 4
- May 2024 1
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- December 2022 9
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- December 2021 7
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- December 2020 1
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- December 2019 1
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- December 2018 1
- November 2018 9
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- December 2017 3
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- September 2017 3
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- July 2017 1
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- December 2016 3
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- October 2016 2
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- July 2016 1
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- December 2015 2
- November 2015 4
- October 2015 4
- September 2015 4
- August 2015 3
- July 2015 6
- June 2015 6
Responsible Government and the Australian Constitution book forum - Author’s Response
Benjamin B Saunders
I am grateful to Professor James Stellios and Leslie Gonye for their interaction with my book – from two very different perspectives.
The book is an expansion and development of my PhD research, which was a historical examination of the views of the framers of the Constitution regarding responsible government, completed in 2017. At the time, Professor Stellios encouraged me to develop further some aspects of my work, including giving further examination to the concepts of ‘popular sovereignty’ and the ‘sovereignty’ of the people, and also reflecting further on the doctrinal implications of my thesis.
Parliamentary Procedure and Responsible Government - Responsible Government and the Australian Constitution book forum
Leslie Gonye
I commend Ben Saunders on his book Responsible Government and the Australian Constitution. He has produced an accessible work that diligently examines and threads together a vast volume of material to argue the importance of historic context in understanding the Constitution regarding responsible government. This is key, as the provisions in the Constitution that concern the executive are relatively few and as responsible government is fundamentally political, there is plenty of scope for principles to evolve for governments to operate for the sovereign people of Australia to govern themselves in the manner they deem best (Saunders, p 207).
Responsible Government and the Australian Constitution book forum
James Stellios
In this comment I offer observations on Associate Professor Saunders’ book, Responsible Government and the Australian Constitution (Hart, 2023) (Saunders), focusing primarily on the doctrinal implications of the book’s thesis. I will start by reflecting on the institutions of ‘representative and responsible’ government. While often presented as a composite expression, the institutions are distinct in principle, and that distinctiveness might have important implications for the role of judicial review. Further complicating the place of judicial review within the constitutional system is the tension created by the combination of political and legal constitutionalism, as each conception of constitutionalism contemplates a different means for controlling government power. Finally, I briefly reflect on the doctrinal implications of these constitutional features.
Measuring Accountability in Public Governance Regimes book forum - Author’s reply
Ellen Rock
I am very grateful to Dr Anna Olijnyk and Emeritus Professor John McMillan for taking the time to engage so thoughtfully with the arguments I have made in the book, and for their insightful contributions to this book forum. In my reply, I would like to reflect on their comments by reference to perhaps the most high-profile accountability development that has post-dated the publication of this book: the establishment of a National Anti-Corruption Commission. This development has of course been on the agenda for some time, allowing ample opportunity to design an optimal model. The Labor government introduced its long-awaited bill into Parliament in September and has since been passed in an amended form by both Houses. It is clearly too early to predict how effective the ultimate Commission will be as an accountability mechanism. However, informed by the arguments I have made in Measuring Accountability, two key points bear consideration.
Substantive grounds of judicial review: What can Measuring Accountability tell us? Measuring Accountability in Public Governance Regimes book forum
Anna Olijnyk
Ellen Rock pulls off an impressive feat in Measuring Accountability in Public Governance Regimes (‘Measuring Accountability’). The book’s two central insights are, on the one hand, usually overlooked in administrative law scholarship and, on the other, so convincing as to elicit a reaction of ‘yes, of course!’ Rock points out, first, that claims of ‘too much’ or ‘not enough’ accountability make little sense without a normative benchmark of the ideal amount of accountability. Secondly, she argues the existence of an accountability deficit or overload must be assessed at a systemic level, rather than by focusing on single accountability mechanisms in isolation.
In this post, I explore how these insights might shed light on the (non)development of novel grounds of judicial review addressing serious forms of administrative injustice (‘substantive grounds of review’) in Australia.
Evaluating Accountability Outcomes – not easy, but worth trying - Measuring Accountability in Public Governance Regimes book forum
John McMillan
Accountability has become an accustomed concept in our professional and public life.
We are constantly reminded in the workplace that we are accountable for how we discharge functions and the impact of our actions on others. We are equally likely to draw on accountability principles to question the professional conduct of others. A familiar line in daily media stories is that government officials must be held accountable if allegations are substantiated about matters as diverse as Robodebt collection, flood prevention, grant allocation, COVID enforcement, workplace abuse, conflict of interest, privacy breaches, wasteful spending and misleading promises. Those of us engaged in teaching or legal practice are likely to rely on accountability as an overarching norm to explain how public (and private) sector entities and officers should be answerable for what they do.
What more can be said? Dr Ellen Rock dives straight in! While explaining accountability theory both comprehensively and lucidly, she takes the discussion further by focussing valuably on two practical dimensions.
Proportionality and Facts in Constitutional Adjudication book forum - Author’s reply
Anne Carter
I am honoured and humbled to have such an eminent panel engage with my book, Proportionality and Facts in Constitutional Adjudication. As I will explain below, the motivations for this book stemmed in part from my time as a practising government lawyer, so I’m particularly delighted that this book forum includes two practitioners of public law, along with a leading comparative constitutional law scholar. Each panellist has engaged thoughtfully with the substance of the book and has raised a number of distinct issues. In this post I will explain the motivations behind the book and its main themes and findings, as well as responding to the helpful contributions from the three panellists. In doing so I will sketch some future directions about the ongoing conversation about facts in proportionality reasoning (and public law more generally).
The Factual Questions in Legitimacy Testing - Proportionality and Facts in Constitutional Adjudication book forum
Samuel Murray
Dr Anne Carter’s Proportionality and Facts in Constitutional Adjudication is a timely and welcome addition to the perpetually growing commentary concerning the advent of structured proportionality in the High Court’s jurisprudence of the implied freedom of political communication.
As Dr Carter notes throughout the book , a bare majority of the High Court in McCloy v New South Wales (2015) 257 CLR 178 dramatically changed the approach to testing proportionality in respect of the implied freedom by adopting a structured, multi-faceted approach to proportionality testing, effectively in lieu of the prior verbal formulation from Lange v Australian Broadcasting Corporation (1997) 189 CLR 520. given how extensively it changed the approach to the implied freedom. McCloy heralded a new wave of both academic commentary and case-law about the merits and application of the new formulation. This book does an excellent job at building out the former and offering guidance for the latter in respect of the use of facts in the new world of implied freedom proportionality testing.
Challenges for State Parties Engaged in Proportionality Litigation - Proportionality and Facts in Constitutional Adjudication book forum
Mike Wait
Dr Anne Carter’s new book, Proportionality and Facts in Constitutional Adjudication, makes a substantial and timely contribution to our understanding of a range of issues emerging in the burgeoning field of proportionality litigation. The focus of the book is on sources of evidence, burdens of proof and aspects of procedure. However, the book’s real strength is that it locates what are ultimately practical litigious issues within a sophisticated account of the evolution of the implied freedom of political communication in Australia and an appreciation of comparative approaches drawn from jurisdictions which have long wrestled with these issues.
The Art and (Social) Science of Proportionality and Facts in Constitutional Adjudication - Proportionality and Facts in Constitutional Adjudication book forum
Rosalind Dixon
Proportionality analysis is ultimately deeply fact dependent. It depends on an assessment of the suitability of laws for achieving their purposes – a question of basic logic and social fact. It further requires an assessment of whether a law is necessary, or could achieve its objective through some hypothetical, less restrictive alternative, and is 'adequate in the balance', namely achieves greater benefits than costs, from a constitutional perspective.
Anne Carter notes in her important new book that these are all arguably 'legislative' rather than 'adjudicative' facts, but also distinct in nature and scope. As the High Court has indicated, each calls for different sources of evidence, and procedures and rules governing their use. Yet to date, the constitutional law-fact nexus has attracted only limited attention in Australia. Carter’s book therefore makes an important contribution to the literature on this question. It provides a nuanced survey of the procedural challenges and complexities facing the High Court in this context, and offers tentative, well-reasoned potential solutions, informed by comparative experience.
Reforming Age Discrimination Law book forum: Alysia Blackham - Author’s reply
Alysia Blackham
It is an incredible privilege to have such an esteemed panel reflect on this book. Reforming Age Discrimination Law is, at its heart, a call to action. It maps the many ways in which individual enforcement of age discrimination law is struggling to achieve meaningful change. It puts forward a series of reforms to improve the individual enforcement model, strengthen positive equality duties, bolster the roles of statutory equality agencies, and enhance collective enforcement. This is an ambitious programme of reform, that requires action by governments, employers, unions, statutory agencies, legal practitioners, legal educators, courts, and judges. I argue, too, that these reforms work best together; they are mutually supportive and reinforcing, just as these forms of enforcement work best together.
Reforming Age Discrimination Law book forum: The Hon Anthony North KC - Two suggestions to enhance the enforcement of age discrimination law
The Hon Anthony North KC
Congratulations to Alysia Blackham on a very high-quality contribution to the learning in this area. I was particularly impressed by the logic and coherence in the development of the argument.
There are many issues raised in this book that capture my interest. I have chosen two, each of which reflects the different phases of my career, first as a judge, and then as a law reformer. Improvements here would make a significant difference to age discrimination law. The first concerns the reverse onus of proof, and the second concerns the enforcement of positive duties.
Reforming Age Discrimination Law book forum: Oanh Tran - Naming, Blaming but Not Claiming: Young Workers’ Experience of Age Discrimination
Oanh Tran
When we think about age discrimination, we think and talk about how it affects older people, but it equally affects young people. The law itself is discriminatory for young people. Alysia Blackham’s new book both explains the problems, and proffers solutions. Blackham's book considers the framework of ‘naming, blaming and claiming’ to explain how disputes emerge. In this post, I discuss some relevant examples where young workers name and blame, and discuss why they do not claim. I also comment on a few of Blackham’s suggested reforms.
Reforming Age Discrimination Law book forum: Andrew Byrnes
Andrew Byrnes
At the outset let me congratulate Associate Professor Blackham on the publication of what is a major contribution to the literature on discrimination law and age discrimination. There is, of course, a considerable body of literature examining the limitations of the legal frameworks that we have adopted in Australia and comparable jurisdictions to address different forms of discrimination. However, this book makes important and innovative contributions on the empirical, theoretical and policy levels: it should stimulate deep reflection and policy change.
Reforming Age Discrimination Law book forum: Rosalind Croucher
Rosalind Croucher
This post was prompted by remarks I made as part of a panel discussion to mark the publication of Associate Professor Alysia Blackham’s new book, Reforming Age Discrimination Law: Beyond Individual Enforcement, published this year by Oxford University Press in their prestigious Oxford Labour Law series.
First, I should say, that this is a fine book. Even before you get to page 1 you find a set of endorsements that would make any author blush. Phrases like ‘must read’ and ‘”go-to” resource’, ‘groundbreaking’, and ‘outstanding contribution’ leap off the page. This is in addition to the usual accolades you would expect for an academic book, like ‘meticulous research’, ‘scrupulous comparative doctrinal research with meticulous empirical case studies’, ‘sophisticated account’, ‘nuanced understanding’, ‘impressive socio-legal study’. It is, as Professor Colm O’Cinneide, acclaims, ‘a remarkably good book’.