Since 1901, when the Australian colonies united to form one federation — one united people, one indissoluble Federal Commonwealth, several states, one Crown — the notion of the Crown has remained a value-laden abstraction, defying legal definition. Aspects of its operation and application have been described, and aspects of its legal incidents and legal consequences have been identified. But its contours have never been mapped. The contributors to this book each shine a light on one particular dimension of the notion of the Crown. Discussions include the nature and role of the Crown; the concept of sovereignty with regards to the First Australians, and to the Australian people as a whole; the question of whether the Crown can do wrong; the ...
The Treaty was a constitutional agreement entered into by Maori, then sovereign of New Zealand, and ...
A fundamental principle of the common law, stemming from the doctrine of tenures, provides that the ...
Whatever may be the policy of a (declaratory) power in the Crown conclusively to certify the limits ...
This book explores the nature of the Crown in its legal and political context. Here the term The Cro...
The imperial Crown has evolved into the New Zealand Crown, yet the implications of this change are a...
This thesis set out to answer a deceptively simple question: why did the 1999 referendum to abolish ...
A troubling veil of mystery still shrouds the central institution of the British Constitution – the ...
The ‘Crown’ in New Zealand is often seen as an essential partner in the Treaty of Waitangi relations...
A troubling veil of mystery still shrouds the central institution of the British Constitution – the ...
Simply put, Crown liability doctrine in Crown/Aboriginal Law in Canada is a mess. Demonstrably, ther...
In New Zealand, 'the Crown' is frequently referred to in contemporary discourse relating to the Trea...
My focus in this paper is on the treatment of the Crown by the courts, especially Canadian courts, i...
This commentary explains the Privy Council’s opinion in Cooper v Stuart (1889) 14 App Cas 286, a cas...
Any appraisal of the position of the monarchy in New Zealand inevitably invites comparisons with Aus...
The honour of the Crown in Canadian Aboriginal jurisprudence has taken on a prominent role in interp...
The Treaty was a constitutional agreement entered into by Maori, then sovereign of New Zealand, and ...
A fundamental principle of the common law, stemming from the doctrine of tenures, provides that the ...
Whatever may be the policy of a (declaratory) power in the Crown conclusively to certify the limits ...
This book explores the nature of the Crown in its legal and political context. Here the term The Cro...
The imperial Crown has evolved into the New Zealand Crown, yet the implications of this change are a...
This thesis set out to answer a deceptively simple question: why did the 1999 referendum to abolish ...
A troubling veil of mystery still shrouds the central institution of the British Constitution – the ...
The ‘Crown’ in New Zealand is often seen as an essential partner in the Treaty of Waitangi relations...
A troubling veil of mystery still shrouds the central institution of the British Constitution – the ...
Simply put, Crown liability doctrine in Crown/Aboriginal Law in Canada is a mess. Demonstrably, ther...
In New Zealand, 'the Crown' is frequently referred to in contemporary discourse relating to the Trea...
My focus in this paper is on the treatment of the Crown by the courts, especially Canadian courts, i...
This commentary explains the Privy Council’s opinion in Cooper v Stuart (1889) 14 App Cas 286, a cas...
Any appraisal of the position of the monarchy in New Zealand inevitably invites comparisons with Aus...
The honour of the Crown in Canadian Aboriginal jurisprudence has taken on a prominent role in interp...
The Treaty was a constitutional agreement entered into by Maori, then sovereign of New Zealand, and ...
A fundamental principle of the common law, stemming from the doctrine of tenures, provides that the ...
Whatever may be the policy of a (declaratory) power in the Crown conclusively to certify the limits ...