[The Victorian Government has made a commitment to consult with the community on how best to protect and promote human rights in Victoria. To this end, it has established a Human Rights Consultation Committee to undertake this consultation and to report on the desirability or otherwise of enacting a Bill of Rights. The government has, however, indicated its preference for a statutory Bill of Rights and one that preserves the 'sover- eignty of Parliament'. This article takes those two government preferences as its baseline and then explores what might follow if the preservation of parliamentary sovereignty is taken seriously within a Victorian rights framework.]
Over the last thirty years several national and domestic common law legislatures have sought to bett...
The paper examines whether there was any basis for Parliament to enact section 3(2) of the Supreme C...
In 2010 the Australian Government decided that it would not propose a Human Rights Act, despite the ...
The Victorian Government has made a commitment to consult with the community on how best to protect ...
Victoria and the Australian Capital Territory, within an Australian federal system of government, h...
Simon Evans and Carolyn Evans look at the issues facing a new committee. Australian political histo...
George Williams, who chaired the Victorian government’s Human Rights Consultation Committee, o...
Formulating the question This thesis examines constitutional entrenchment of the Victorian Charter o...
The ACT could be the first Australian jurisdiction to establish a Bill of Rights, says Hilary Charle...
Will New South Wales follow the lead of the ACT and Victoria? George Williams puts the case for a st...
Important amendments to the ACT Human Rights Act are currently being considered by the Legislative A...
Chapter 4.1 Stellios (‘Australian constitutionalism and the UK-style dialogue model of human rights ...
Assesses the lessons offered by the Australian Capital Territory's Human Rights Act 2004 and the Vic...
Unlike the constitutions of many nations, such as the United States of America and the Republic of S...
An Australian Human Rights Act that is broadly consistent with the Victorian and ACT legislation cou...
Over the last thirty years several national and domestic common law legislatures have sought to bett...
The paper examines whether there was any basis for Parliament to enact section 3(2) of the Supreme C...
In 2010 the Australian Government decided that it would not propose a Human Rights Act, despite the ...
The Victorian Government has made a commitment to consult with the community on how best to protect ...
Victoria and the Australian Capital Territory, within an Australian federal system of government, h...
Simon Evans and Carolyn Evans look at the issues facing a new committee. Australian political histo...
George Williams, who chaired the Victorian government’s Human Rights Consultation Committee, o...
Formulating the question This thesis examines constitutional entrenchment of the Victorian Charter o...
The ACT could be the first Australian jurisdiction to establish a Bill of Rights, says Hilary Charle...
Will New South Wales follow the lead of the ACT and Victoria? George Williams puts the case for a st...
Important amendments to the ACT Human Rights Act are currently being considered by the Legislative A...
Chapter 4.1 Stellios (‘Australian constitutionalism and the UK-style dialogue model of human rights ...
Assesses the lessons offered by the Australian Capital Territory's Human Rights Act 2004 and the Vic...
Unlike the constitutions of many nations, such as the United States of America and the Republic of S...
An Australian Human Rights Act that is broadly consistent with the Victorian and ACT legislation cou...
Over the last thirty years several national and domestic common law legislatures have sought to bett...
The paper examines whether there was any basis for Parliament to enact section 3(2) of the Supreme C...
In 2010 the Australian Government decided that it would not propose a Human Rights Act, despite the ...