Section 41 of the Australian Constitution appears, on its face, to guarantee state electors the right to vote in Commonwealth elections. However, the High Court held in R v Pearson; Ex parte Sipka that the provision was merely transitional and no longer has any effect. This article takes issue with that conclusion. The authors contend that the majority’s reasoning in Pearson is unpersuasive. Further, a revived s 41 would cohere well with some of the central themes in Australia’s recent constitutional evolution, including the High Court’s changing approach to the protection of voting rights and the role of the states in constitutional reform under the Australia Acts 1986. The time is therefore ripe for the High Court to reconsider Pearson an...
A healthy democracy makes sure that all members of the community have equal access to the political ...
Having promised that the 2015 national election would be the last conducted under the first-past-the...
This article examines the reasoning in Spence v Queensland (Spence), in which a majority of the High...
Section 41 of the Australian Constitution appears, on its face, to guarantee state electors the righ...
Section 41 of the Australian Constitution appears, on its face, to guarantee state electors the righ...
In the 2007 Roach decision the High Court indicated there may be some guarantee of voting rights imp...
This paper is about the voting rights of incarcerated Australian citizens. It begins by providing so...
Argues that since there is no explicit right to vote embedded in the Australia constitution, the par...
This article provides an overview of the controversy surrounding the 2013 election of senators for W...
Until 2017, the most recent disqualification of a member of the Australian Parliament under section ...
The Supreme Court of Canada’s political process cases cover a wide array of issues, including the ri...
This article argues for a judicial interpretation of the right to vote under s.3 of the Canadian Cha...
This article considers the extent to which voting equality is and could be constitutionally protecte...
This article addresses a number of key issues confronting contemporary electoral law in Australia. I...
In this article, the author argues that certain types of constitutional interpretation in Australia ...
A healthy democracy makes sure that all members of the community have equal access to the political ...
Having promised that the 2015 national election would be the last conducted under the first-past-the...
This article examines the reasoning in Spence v Queensland (Spence), in which a majority of the High...
Section 41 of the Australian Constitution appears, on its face, to guarantee state electors the righ...
Section 41 of the Australian Constitution appears, on its face, to guarantee state electors the righ...
In the 2007 Roach decision the High Court indicated there may be some guarantee of voting rights imp...
This paper is about the voting rights of incarcerated Australian citizens. It begins by providing so...
Argues that since there is no explicit right to vote embedded in the Australia constitution, the par...
This article provides an overview of the controversy surrounding the 2013 election of senators for W...
Until 2017, the most recent disqualification of a member of the Australian Parliament under section ...
The Supreme Court of Canada’s political process cases cover a wide array of issues, including the ri...
This article argues for a judicial interpretation of the right to vote under s.3 of the Canadian Cha...
This article considers the extent to which voting equality is and could be constitutionally protecte...
This article addresses a number of key issues confronting contemporary electoral law in Australia. I...
In this article, the author argues that certain types of constitutional interpretation in Australia ...
A healthy democracy makes sure that all members of the community have equal access to the political ...
Having promised that the 2015 national election would be the last conducted under the first-past-the...
This article examines the reasoning in Spence v Queensland (Spence), in which a majority of the High...