Australian courts and administrative tribunals are dependent upon government for funding. Additionally, in most circumstances, courts and administrative tribunals are dependent upon government for administrative assistance. The rule of law requires the three branches of government, the executive, the legislative and the judicial be separate. Given the dependence on funding and administrative support, can Australia’s courts and administrative tribunals be “independent”? This article examines whether there is difference between administrative independence and adjudicative independence and then presents the views of participants gained from two separate surveys on the issue of whether there is a difference between administrative and adjudicati...
Lawsuits against the government form a part of the regular functioning of legal systems in democrati...
The article describes the positive achievements of administrative justice in the Australian Union in...
The relationship between de jure and de facto judicial independence is much debated in the literatur...
Australian courts and administrative tribunals are dependent upon government for funding. Additional...
In order for judges to apply the law impartially, it is essential that they be, and be seen to be, i...
'Principles of judicial and quasi-judicial independence are fundamental to all democracies and yet, ...
This comment examines and contrasts government adjudication in the US, Australia, and the UK, and co...
This article develops a first principles conception of judicial independence. It does so by way of s...
The judiciary is the third branch of government. The rule of law requires that the judiciary be inde...
In his presentation on judicial independence to the Australian Judicial Conference in November 1996,...
The judiciary is the third branch of government. The rule of law requires that the judiciary be inde...
In this article, the author argues that the concept of judicial independence has served more as an...
Judicial independence is universally recognised as a necessary attribute of any society that claims ...
This article compares several systems of administrative adjudication. In the U.S., adjudication is t...
This article critically analyses the landmark reform of the Victorian court system from a comparativ...
Lawsuits against the government form a part of the regular functioning of legal systems in democrati...
The article describes the positive achievements of administrative justice in the Australian Union in...
The relationship between de jure and de facto judicial independence is much debated in the literatur...
Australian courts and administrative tribunals are dependent upon government for funding. Additional...
In order for judges to apply the law impartially, it is essential that they be, and be seen to be, i...
'Principles of judicial and quasi-judicial independence are fundamental to all democracies and yet, ...
This comment examines and contrasts government adjudication in the US, Australia, and the UK, and co...
This article develops a first principles conception of judicial independence. It does so by way of s...
The judiciary is the third branch of government. The rule of law requires that the judiciary be inde...
In his presentation on judicial independence to the Australian Judicial Conference in November 1996,...
The judiciary is the third branch of government. The rule of law requires that the judiciary be inde...
In this article, the author argues that the concept of judicial independence has served more as an...
Judicial independence is universally recognised as a necessary attribute of any society that claims ...
This article compares several systems of administrative adjudication. In the U.S., adjudication is t...
This article critically analyses the landmark reform of the Victorian court system from a comparativ...
Lawsuits against the government form a part of the regular functioning of legal systems in democrati...
The article describes the positive achievements of administrative justice in the Australian Union in...
The relationship between de jure and de facto judicial independence is much debated in the literatur...