Accountability and transparency are essential to the proper functioning of democracy in New Zealand. The Attorney-General is critical to constitutional arrangements by which he upholds both legal and political functions. This paper serves to describe, analyse and critique each of the Attorney-General’s specific roles and assess their relative frameworks for accountability using Bovens framework. As the Law Officer of government, named representative in Crown proceedings and the link between the Executive and the Judiciary, the Attorney-General permeates all three branches of government. Ultimately, this paper aims to expose the lack of forums available that can question the Attorney-General’s decisions and initiate consequences. It serves t...
The concept of the “public interest” is the foundational principle that guides and structures the sp...
The office of Attorney-General for the Commonwealth of Australia has existed since Federation on 1 J...
What do you call 100 lawyers at the bottom of the ocean? 'A good start!' New Zealand's legal prof...
The current mechanism for judicial appointments in New Zealand is non-transparent and lacks sufficie...
This article explores the way judicial review of administrative action in Aotearoa New Zealand engen...
The constitutional landscape in New Zealand has undergone significant change over the last 20-35 yea...
This paper examines the Attorney General’s obligation, in Canada and New Zealand, to report on incon...
The advent of MMP may make a considerable difference to the way law is practised in New Zealand. It ...
Adam Dodek has argued that the Prime Minister’s Office lawyer sidelines the Attorney General as chie...
The recent Greek debt crisis highlighted the need for a robust fiscal policy regime. New Zealand's P...
The New Zealand Bill of Rights Act 1990 (NZBORA) retains Parliament’s sovereign power to make law. H...
© 2007 Dr. Fiona HanlonIt is often assumed that the office of Attorney General in Australia carries ...
This thesis introduces the Solicitor-General as an important actor in the modern Australian constitu...
New Zealand’s new regulatory system for lawyers has been operating since 2008. This article evaluate...
This article is a book review of Philip A Joseph Constitutional and Administrative Law in New Zealan...
The concept of the “public interest” is the foundational principle that guides and structures the sp...
The office of Attorney-General for the Commonwealth of Australia has existed since Federation on 1 J...
What do you call 100 lawyers at the bottom of the ocean? 'A good start!' New Zealand's legal prof...
The current mechanism for judicial appointments in New Zealand is non-transparent and lacks sufficie...
This article explores the way judicial review of administrative action in Aotearoa New Zealand engen...
The constitutional landscape in New Zealand has undergone significant change over the last 20-35 yea...
This paper examines the Attorney General’s obligation, in Canada and New Zealand, to report on incon...
The advent of MMP may make a considerable difference to the way law is practised in New Zealand. It ...
Adam Dodek has argued that the Prime Minister’s Office lawyer sidelines the Attorney General as chie...
The recent Greek debt crisis highlighted the need for a robust fiscal policy regime. New Zealand's P...
The New Zealand Bill of Rights Act 1990 (NZBORA) retains Parliament’s sovereign power to make law. H...
© 2007 Dr. Fiona HanlonIt is often assumed that the office of Attorney General in Australia carries ...
This thesis introduces the Solicitor-General as an important actor in the modern Australian constitu...
New Zealand’s new regulatory system for lawyers has been operating since 2008. This article evaluate...
This article is a book review of Philip A Joseph Constitutional and Administrative Law in New Zealan...
The concept of the “public interest” is the foundational principle that guides and structures the sp...
The office of Attorney-General for the Commonwealth of Australia has existed since Federation on 1 J...
What do you call 100 lawyers at the bottom of the ocean? 'A good start!' New Zealand's legal prof...