Melbourne Law School - Theses

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    Sex work as work : labour regulation in the legal sex industry in Victoria
    Murray, Kristen ( 2001-02)
    Prostitution occupies a significant place in academic research. It has been analysed from a range of disciplines including sociology and anthropology, women’s studies, criminology and law, and medicine and health services. Much of the recent scholarship in Australia concerning prostitution has focussed on the relationship between sex work and sexually transmissable diseases, and on the decriminalisation of prostitution. Despite the considerable number of studies into prostitution, there has been only limited consideration in Australia of prostitution as a form of waged labour. Some feminist theorists, writing from an historical perspective, have examined the concepts of sex and work and the way in which these are reproduced within the practice of prostitution.
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    Automating the internet: the law of electronic commerce, contracts and autonomous software agents: regulation of Agent-mediated online contracting: enforceability, liability and risk allocation
    Connors, Grania ( 2002)
    This thesis enquires into the regulation of online contracts formed by autonomous, artificially intelligent software programs, called 'Agents'. It provides an overview of the current state of the law as applied to Agents that negotiate and transact online. Agent transactions are fundamentally different from other computerised transactions, as Agent actions are autonomous, proactive and informed by their ‘intelligence’ and ‘experience’. This paper focuses on three specific areas: (a) the extent to which Agent-generated contracts are, and should be, enforceable; (b) the liability of parties involved in Agent transactions; and (c) the manner in which risk is, and should be, allocated in respect of errors involved in the use of contracting Agents. In exploring these key areas, this thesis considers whether or not the current law adequately deals with Agent-mediated contracts. Areas in which the law fails to satisfactorily resolve issues of enforceability, liability and risk allocation are highlighted, and modifications and reform necessary to achieve such resolution are suggested. This thesis commences with a review of the technical aspects of Agent software, and identifies characteristics that differentiate Agents from other software. We then examine legal doctrine that may be invoked, in current or modified form, to govern Agent contracting activity. Principles of contract law, agency law, and legislative schemes are analysed to ascertain the extent to which they apply to Agent-mediated contracts. In evaluating the operation of contract law, principal-agent law and legislative initiatives, the benchmark against which proposed methods of regulating Agents are measured is the extent to which a particular approach facilitates electronic comerce by providing a strong legal infrastructure. In summary, this thesis: (a) defines and characterises software Agents and discusses e-commerce scenarios in which Agents are, and could be, utilised; (b) reviews principles of contract and agency law, as well as e-commerce legislation, analysing their application to online Agent contracting activity; (c) identifies areas where the law fails to adequately govern Agent-mediated contracts; and (d) suggests ways in which the law may more effectively regulate this new sphere of contracting activity.
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    Superannuation: a public trust
    McAlister, Pamela ( 2002)
    Superannuation funds in Australia were originally established in an occupational environment and administered as private trusts. Superannuation funds are also collective investment schemes and, as such, can have commercial overtones. This thesis demonstrates how the judiciary and the government have both strained and extended private trust law in order to accommodate the distinctive features of the superannuation trust. Chapter 2 examines some of the tensions with traditional trust law by undertaking a survey of case law dealing with disability benefits. A detailed analysis of the statutory scheme contained in the superannuation legislation is undertaken in chapter 3. Chapter 4 will examine the impact of imposing 'merits review' - an administrative law mechanism - on private trustees. These developments suggest that superannuation trustees perform a public function. Yet the private form and source of superannuation benefits indicate that it is inappropriate to simply replace trust law standards with administrative law standards, unless it can be said that superannuation trustees now operate in the public domain. This question is explored in chapter 5 and analogies are drawn with the more public charitable trust. It is concluded that both the charitable trust and the superannuation trust operate within a hybrid 'public service' sector. A unique public model must therefore be formulated. Chapters 6 and 7 propose the specific features of the hybrid public model for superannuation trusts. Modifications to the current legal regime are identified in order to bolster the tentative trend in this direction. It is submitted that this public model offers a solution to the dilemmas currently encountered in conceiving a juristic framework for the modern superannuation trust in Australia.