Melbourne Law School - Theses

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    Institutions of the dead: law, office and the coroner
    Trabsky, Marc ( 2017)
    This thesis writes a history of the institutional life of coronial law in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. The office of coroner has occupied an important role in the common law since the twelfth century. Its status may have waned, its duties may have changed, yet its enduring concern with investigating the causes of death has preserved its vital role in the juridical governance of the dead. This thesis offers a historical account of the modalities by which coroners have occupied their offices and formed lawful relations with the dead in Australia. It does so by examining coronial law in terms of its technologies and its institutional formations. The chapters that follow explore a range of lawful technologies, including place-making, architecture, super visum corporis, manuals and files, each of which became attached to the conduct of the office of coroner in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. The thesis thus offers an institutional history of the coroner by thinking through how technologies have attached the dead to coronial institutions, how coroners have performed their offices, and how they have assumed responsibilities for caring for the dead.
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    A minor jurisprudence of movement
    Barr, Olivia McLeod ( 2012)
    Different offices carry different responsibilities. This thesis addresses the office of jurist and their responsibilities in relation to common law, including the creation and conduct of lawful relations. In Australia, where the dominant form of law continues to be Anglo-Australian common law, it is for the jurist to attend to common law and its practices. By taking seriously the question of office, this thesis shows the jurist how to account for and take responsibility for some of the forms of common law practice as a matter of office. As a way of taking responsibility for this colonial form of law, this thesis creates a minor jurisprudence of movement that accounts for technical and material forms of common law practice. Paying attention to the material dynamic of movement and its relation to the practice of the care of the dead, this thesis reveals how common law moves with a tendency to slide by, unnoticed, through technologies of jurisdiction. Noticing these movements, especially movements in relation to the dead, this thesis carefully engages with two sets of materials, one historical and one contemporary: the historical is a burial party that walked in colonial New South Wales and the contemporary is the struggle to bury the dead in Antarctica. Engaging with these materials with a jurisprudential method of slowness, this thesis narrates and redescribes two vignettes as a way of accounting for the place of movement in the technical and material forms of common law practice. Through the creation of a minor jurisprudence of movement, this thesis offers a better understanding of the place of movement in the technical and material forms of common law practice. In doing so, this thesis challenges the jurist to move well; to attend to the responsibilities of office. While taking responsibility for the practice of a colonial form of law is not an easy task, it is part of what it means for the jurist to take up and hold office. Moving carefully, this thesis offers a way this might be done.