An original account of the 1975 constitutional crisis and its continuing relevance for informal constitutional change in contemporary Australian law.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Brendan Lim is a barrister at the New South Wales Bar, practising principally in public and commercial law, and a fellow at the Gilbert + Tobin Centre of Public Law, University of New South Wales, Sydney. He was previously Counsel Assisting the Commonwealth Solicitor-General and a Judge's Associate at the High Court and the Federal Court of Australia.
Inhaltsangabe
Part 1. Introduction: I. New questions II. The plan Part 2. Informal Constitutional Change: I. The possibility of informal change II. The identification of informal change III. The legitimacy of informal change Part 3. The Whitlam Dismissal: I. The standard narrative II. The dismissal and the constitutional canon III. The higher law narrative IV. Conclusion Part 4. The Murphy Affair: I. Events of 1975-86 II. Murphy and the standard narrative III. Murphy and the higher law narrative IV. Conclusion Part 5. The Mason Court: I. Internal point of view II. Dixon's orthodoxy III. Popular sovereignty foreshadowed: 1962-86 IV. Popular sovereignty ascendant: 1987-95 V. Parliamentary supremacy returns: 1996- VI. Conclusion Part 6. The Howard Referendum: I. Constitutional law and identity II. Whitlam and Republicanism III. Republicanism reinvented IV. Clash of grammars V. Conclusion Part 7. Conclusion.
Part 1. Introduction: I. New questions II. The plan Part 2. Informal Constitutional Change: I. The possibility of informal change II. The identification of informal change III. The legitimacy of informal change Part 3. The Whitlam Dismissal: I. The standard narrative II. The dismissal and the constitutional canon III. The higher law narrative IV. Conclusion Part 4. The Murphy Affair: I. Events of 1975-86 II. Murphy and the standard narrative III. Murphy and the higher law narrative IV. Conclusion Part 5. The Mason Court: I. Internal point of view II. Dixon's orthodoxy III. Popular sovereignty foreshadowed: 1962-86 IV. Popular sovereignty ascendant: 1987-95 V. Parliamentary supremacy returns: 1996- VI. Conclusion Part 6. The Howard Referendum: I. Constitutional law and identity II. Whitlam and Republicanism III. Republicanism reinvented IV. Clash of grammars V. Conclusion Part 7. Conclusion.
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