This article is a study of the recent attempts to secure parliamentary and constitutional reform in South Australia through a representative Constitutional Convention held in August 2003. It examines the political context of this Convention from its political genesis at the hands of the independent Speaker of the House of Assembly through to the delivery of the final report to the Parliament. It is argued that the case for reform to sections of the South Australia Constitution, the electoral system and the administration of the Parliament is compelling, but concludes that the prospects of meaningful reform from this exercise are slight. The paper offers an assessment of the proposed changes and considers alternatives. It concludes by arguin...
[Introduction]:...I want to concentrate on what Australian Governments have done and should do to im...
In 1991 the South Australian Government enacted legislation requiring electoral commissioners to dra...
This thesis examines the feasibility of lay citizen participation in the process of constitutional r...
This article is a study of the recent attempts to secure parliamentary and constitutional reform in ...
With South Australia’s Constitutional Convention continuing to generate controversy, Clement Macinty...
The process by which the Australian Constitution is amended is complex and probably little understoo...
Brian Costar looks at one product of South Australia’s novel constitutional reform process WHEN for...
On the weekend of the 9th and 10th of August 2003, participants at the Constitutional Convention del...
It is desirable for a constitution, as a power-limiting device, to possess significant rigidity or, ...
The article by Jordan Bastoni "The South Australian Constitution: Why did it fail" on page 60, in vo...
This paper seeks to enter the current debate over the future of the South Australian Legislative Cou...
In 2010, the Commonwealth government proposed Australia’s third attempt to give federal constitution...
Discussion of the prospects of formal constitutional change as a mechanism for reforming Australian ...
This Article considers the process by which electoral reform ought to take place, focusing in partic...
The new federal government committed that 2015 would be the last election under the first past the p...
[Introduction]:...I want to concentrate on what Australian Governments have done and should do to im...
In 1991 the South Australian Government enacted legislation requiring electoral commissioners to dra...
This thesis examines the feasibility of lay citizen participation in the process of constitutional r...
This article is a study of the recent attempts to secure parliamentary and constitutional reform in ...
With South Australia’s Constitutional Convention continuing to generate controversy, Clement Macinty...
The process by which the Australian Constitution is amended is complex and probably little understoo...
Brian Costar looks at one product of South Australia’s novel constitutional reform process WHEN for...
On the weekend of the 9th and 10th of August 2003, participants at the Constitutional Convention del...
It is desirable for a constitution, as a power-limiting device, to possess significant rigidity or, ...
The article by Jordan Bastoni "The South Australian Constitution: Why did it fail" on page 60, in vo...
This paper seeks to enter the current debate over the future of the South Australian Legislative Cou...
In 2010, the Commonwealth government proposed Australia’s third attempt to give federal constitution...
Discussion of the prospects of formal constitutional change as a mechanism for reforming Australian ...
This Article considers the process by which electoral reform ought to take place, focusing in partic...
The new federal government committed that 2015 would be the last election under the first past the p...
[Introduction]:...I want to concentrate on what Australian Governments have done and should do to im...
In 1991 the South Australian Government enacted legislation requiring electoral commissioners to dra...
This thesis examines the feasibility of lay citizen participation in the process of constitutional r...