Index
- November 2024 5
- October 2024 2
- August 2024 3
- July 2024 2
- June 2024 4
- May 2024 1
- April 2024 5
- March 2024 5
- February 2024 4
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- December 2023 5
- November 2023 7
- October 2023 4
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- July 2023 5
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- February 2023 9
- December 2022 9
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- October 2022 7
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- August 2022 8
- July 2022 3
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- May 2022 9
- April 2022 7
- March 2022 2
- February 2022 5
- December 2021 7
- November 2021 12
- October 2021 9
- September 2021 14
- August 2021 9
- July 2021 5
- June 2021 9
- May 2021 4
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- March 2021 13
- February 2021 7
- December 2020 1
- November 2020 4
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- July 2020 8
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- May 2020 11
- April 2020 6
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- February 2020 3
- January 2020 1
- December 2019 1
- November 2019 3
- October 2019 2
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- June 2019 2
- May 2019 5
- April 2019 8
- March 2019 2
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- December 2018 1
- November 2018 9
- October 2018 2
- September 2018 5
- August 2018 3
- July 2018 3
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- May 2018 5
- April 2018 7
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- December 2017 3
- November 2017 7
- October 2017 4
- September 2017 3
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- July 2017 1
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- January 2017 1
- December 2016 3
- November 2016 4
- October 2016 2
- September 2016 1
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- July 2016 1
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- April 2016 4
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- February 2016 3
- January 2016 1
- December 2015 2
- November 2015 4
- October 2015 4
- September 2015 4
- August 2015 3
- July 2015 6
- June 2015 6
Limits on Non-Statutory Executive Power: Davis v MICMSMA; Davis v Secretary of Department of Home Affairs [2023] HCA 10
Maria O’Sullivan
The recent High Court decision in Davis v Minister for Immigration; DCM20 v Secretary of Department of Home Affairs contains some important statements on the reviewability of non-statutory ministerial guidelines. The key questions before the High Court were whether the Court could determine whether non-statutory executive action by federal departmental officers was unlawful on the ground of legal unreasonableness, and whether the guidelines used by officers to ‘screen’ visa applications to be presented to the Minister were valid.
Manner and form mysteries highlighted but unresolved in Mineralogy v WA
Anne Twomey
One of the difficulties in understanding and applying manner and form constraints on state legislative power is that there is little jurisprudence on the subject and what exists is often unclear, poorly reasoned and in some cases just wrong. That is why the manner and form arguments in Mineralogy …
The High Court’s defence of Academic Freedom in Ridd v JCU
Joshua Forrest & Adrienne Stone
On 13 October 2021, the High Court handed down its decision in Ridd v James Cook University [2021] HCA 32. The decision concludes a bitter, long-running and unedifying legal dispute between James Cook University (JCU) and a former professor, Peter Ridd. It also usefully clarifies the status, content …
Judicial Federalism in Australia book forum: The Hon William Gummow AC
The Hon William Gummow AC
When the Judiciary Committee of the 1891 National Australasian Convention, under the Chairmanship of Andrew Inglis Clark, prepared its report (which is reproduced in Judicial Federalism in Australia: History, Theory, Doctrine and Practice at pp 208 to 210), there were in operation in what today could be identified …
Judicial Federalism in Australia book forum: Brendan Lim
Brendan Lim
History, theory, doctrine and practice. The subtitle of this splendid new book by Gabrielle Appleby, Anna Olijnyk, James Stellios and John Williams, Judicial Federalism in Australia: History, Theory, Doctrine and Practice (Federation Press, 2021), reminds us of the many different resources on which we can draw in …
Judicial Federalism in Australia book forum: Sarah Murray - Stay[ing] out of the twilight’: Judicial Federalism in Australia: History, Theory, Doctrine and Practice
Sarah Murray
Appleby, Olijnyk, Stellios and Williams’ book, Judicial Federalism in Australia – History, Theory, Doctrine and Practice (2021, Federation Press), is nothing short of a constitutional law aficionado’s delight – unravelling the mysteries and twists and turns of Kable through the combined expertise of the authors and the historical, doctrinal …
Judicial federalism in Australia book forum: Erin Delaney - Kable, federalism, and political constitutionalism
Erin F. Delaney
If, as A.V. Dicey once wrote, ‘federalism means legalism,’ it is particularly surprising that studies of federalism so often overlook a federal system’s judicial architecture and its operation. Exploring the ‘predominance of the judiciary in the constitution’ often begins and ends with analysis of …
Judicial Federalism in Australia book forum: Authors' Response
Gabrielle Appleby, Anna Olijnyk, James Stellios & John Williams
This book is the result of years of collective and collaborative thinking around Chapter III of the Australian Constitution, and, to use Professor Sarah Murray’s phrase, the ‘unique form of Australian judicial federalism’ that it reflects today. We are delighted to see the book launched …
Book forum: Alan Robertson SC
Alan Robertson SC
Dr Amanda Sapienza’s Judicial Review of Non-Statutory Executive Action is an important work because it has as its centre of attention non-statutory executive action, rather than dealing with it, however well, in a more general context of public law. In this second category I would include, for …
Book forum: Cheryl Saunders
Cheryl Saunders
Publication of a serious work on judicial review of non-statutory executive power in Australia is long overdue and Amanda Sapienza’s book is very welcome for this reason. I have watched her ideas on these complex issues develop since her presentation to the Cambridge Public Law Conference in 2016. …
Book forum: Jackson Wherrett
Jackson Wherrett
On one level, Dr Amanda Sapienza’s Judicial Review of Non-Statutory Executive Action is a novel examination of an under-explored area of administrative law. At the same time, it joins a very long line of scholarship that considers the principle of the separation of powers. More particularly, it draws on the …
Book forum: Amanda Sapienza
Amanda Sapienza
Between the pandemic and my post-PhD career choices, an in-person launch of Judicial Review of Non-Statutory Executive Action, which was published by the Federation Press at the end of 2020, was out of the question. So I’m indebted to the editors of AUSPUBLAW for hosting this online …
The practical impacts of the ADJR Act on judicial review applications
Brenda Tronson
In this post I provide an overview, from a barrister’s perspective, of the approach I am likely to take when asked for advice regarding a potential judicial review application in relation to a Commonwealth administrative decision. While the Administrative Decisions (Judicial Review) Act 1977 (Cth) (ADJR Act) …
Corruption and Human Rights Sanctions in Australia: Where Public Law Meets Foreign Policy
Anton Moiseienko
In 2020, the Australian Parliament’s Joint Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs, Defence and Trade (JSCFADT) held an inquiry into the potential introduction of corruption and human rights sanctions, also referred to as ‘Magnitsky’ sanctions. The inquiry culminated in a report calling on the government to ‘enact stand alone …
Delays in Parole Applications at the Parole Board Queensland: An Action in False Imprisonment?
Anna Kretowicz
In March 2021, there were an estimated 2,100 undecided new applications at the Parole Board Queensland (the Board). While administrative backlogs are undesirable (one need only think of the Administrative Appeals Tribunal, where a backlog of 53,000 applications in 2018 left the body in chaos), the problem here compounds with the legislative …
The Rise of Automated Decision-Making in the Administrative State: Are Kerr’s Institutions still ‘Fit for Purpose’?
Yee-Fui Ng
The Kerr Committee’s vision for a new administrative justice system led to the ground-breaking introduction of the ‘new administrative law’ package in the 1970s, incorporating the establishment of a generalist administrative tribunal, statutory judicial review, the office of the Commonwealth Ombudsman, and later, in the 1980s, freedom of information …
Superimposing private duties on the exercise of public powers: Sharma v Minister for the Environment
Ellen Rock
In May of this year, Bromberg J in the Federal Court handed down a key decision in climate change litigation which has made waves both within Australia and internationally. Sharma v Minister for the Environment [2021] FCA 560 was a negligence claim commenced in connection with an application to expand …
Overcoming Graham: The s 75(v) constitutional guarantee and non-disclosure in migration and citizenship decisions
Isolde Daniell
The Migration and Citizenship Legislation Amendment (Strengthening Information Provisions) Bill 2020 (Cth) (the Bill) was introduced to the Commonwealth House of Representatives on 10 December 2020. It has since been considered by the Senate Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills and the Parliamentary Joint Committee on Human Rights, and …