The definitive version is available at www.blackwell-synergy.comThis article responds to recent cases of parliamentary speech which reflect the ascendancy of a totalising ‘mainstream’ approach to public discourse and a political leadership that may, at times, be overly attentive to the majority-rule dimension of democracy. These developments spark a more general discussion of the phenomenology of privileged parliamentary speech, the role of speech freedoms in liberal democratic orders and the duties of parliamentary representatives within them. I make two general conclusions. First, the ways in which we normally argue and think about free speech will not generally apply to the speech of parliamentarians because their speech rights cannot be...
The Victorian Government has made a commitment to consult with the community on how best to protect ...
This article explores the relationship between different forms of review of enacted legislati...
How do liberal democracies respond to the fact of multiple speakers in public discourse? Previous ap...
The article reports on a study using grounded theory methodology to track the contexts in which Aust...
This article explores the role and the abuse of the privilege of freedom of speech in Parliament. So...
Australia is the land of the 'Fair Go'. But does this extend to giving everyone the right to speak f...
There is no doubt that freedom of speech plays an important role in the process of democratization. ...
Freedom of speech is a vital democratic freedom. It is also a freedom that most Australians take for...
In recent years, free speech debates have featured unusually prominently in public debate in Austral...
In recent years Australian governments have proposed, and enacted, ‘ag-gag’ laws which extend the cr...
The seductive plausibility of single steps in a chain of evolutionary development of a legal rule is...
The 1992 judgmentsI constituted a high watermark of recognition of freedom of speech in Australian c...
Freedom of speech is a vital democratic freedom and one that most Australians take for granted, beli...
In a democracy, a constitutional separation of powers between the executive and the assembly may be ...
Parliament in its exclusive cognizance can legislate for anything it sees fit. However this paper fi...
The Victorian Government has made a commitment to consult with the community on how best to protect ...
This article explores the relationship between different forms of review of enacted legislati...
How do liberal democracies respond to the fact of multiple speakers in public discourse? Previous ap...
The article reports on a study using grounded theory methodology to track the contexts in which Aust...
This article explores the role and the abuse of the privilege of freedom of speech in Parliament. So...
Australia is the land of the 'Fair Go'. But does this extend to giving everyone the right to speak f...
There is no doubt that freedom of speech plays an important role in the process of democratization. ...
Freedom of speech is a vital democratic freedom. It is also a freedom that most Australians take for...
In recent years, free speech debates have featured unusually prominently in public debate in Austral...
In recent years Australian governments have proposed, and enacted, ‘ag-gag’ laws which extend the cr...
The seductive plausibility of single steps in a chain of evolutionary development of a legal rule is...
The 1992 judgmentsI constituted a high watermark of recognition of freedom of speech in Australian c...
Freedom of speech is a vital democratic freedom and one that most Australians take for granted, beli...
In a democracy, a constitutional separation of powers between the executive and the assembly may be ...
Parliament in its exclusive cognizance can legislate for anything it sees fit. However this paper fi...
The Victorian Government has made a commitment to consult with the community on how best to protect ...
This article explores the relationship between different forms of review of enacted legislati...
How do liberal democracies respond to the fact of multiple speakers in public discourse? Previous ap...