Melbourne Law School - Theses

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    An analysis of the office of Attorney General in Australia and directions for the future
    HANLON, FIONA ( 2007)
    It is often assumed that the office of Attorney General in Australia carries with it an obligation to act independently of political considerations that does not apply to other ministerial offices. This is the orthodox view. There is, however, another view, the heterodox view, of the office of Attorney General, according to which the ministerial office that bears the title ‘Attorney General’ cannot be distinguished from other ministerial offices in any significant respect. The question which this thesis considers is whether any reliable basis can be found for the orthodox view either in terms of the manner in which the office of Attorney General is constituted in the twenty-first century or at any time since its first establishment in Australia. The thesis identifies possible sources for the existence of an obligation to act independently and tests the accuracy of those sources against the historical and current operation of the office in Australia. Having carried out that analysis the thesis then examines options that could be considered for the future to assist the hopes and aims motivating the orthodox view of the office of Attorney General to be achieved. It is important to assess the legitimacy of the orthodox view because of the faith and trust that it places in the Attorney General in relation to the maintenance of the integrity or Australia's constitutional structures and the manner of the exercise or executive power. If it is unjustified then this belief and trust could result in the inappropriate allocation of important and largely un-reviewable responsibilities to the holder of the office. It may be time to let go of the title "Attorney General and adopt "Minister of Justice" instead. This will raise issues as to the ability of the Parliament to hold the executive to account, the independence of the judiciary both for the adjudication of matters before it and for its administration and how its expenditure of public funds can be authorised and scrutinised by the Parliament. Also raised will be the status and professional responsibilities of lawyers in government in the defence of the integrity of the legal and judicial system.
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    The parens patriae and wardship jurisdiction of the Family Court of Australia: its history and current status
    Coleiro, Joseph J. ( 1992)
    Before the Family Law Act 1975 (Cth) came into operation, the Supreme Court of each State exercised a complete jurisdiction over a child of a marriage. That jurisdiction included the jurisdiction conferred by the Matrimonial Causes Act 1959 - 1973 (Cth) and the state Supreme Courts' inherent parens patriae jurisdiction and wardship of court jurisdiction. With the passing of the Family Law Act 1975 (Cth), the Commonwealth Parliament did not include in that Act provisions that created a parens patriae jurisdiction and a wardship of court jurisdiction in the Family Court. Consequently, the jurisdiction over children of a marriage became fragmented between the Family Court exercising jurisdiction conferred by the Family Law Act, and the state Supreme Courts exercising their inherent parens patriae jurisdiction and wardship of court jurisdiction. This paper discusses the question whether it is a valid exercise of the Commonwealth's Marriage Power and the Matrimonial Causes Power for the Commonwealth to pass enactments creating a parens patriae jurisdiction and a wardship of court jurisdiction and vesting them in the Family Court of Australia.
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    Australian water law: an historical and analytical background
    Clark, Sandford Delbridge ( 1971)
    The thesis traces the history of governmental intervention in Australian water management. At the State level, it examines traditional common law doctrines, their inadequacies to meet Australian demands, and the tensions between private rights and public control inherent in the Australian system of administrative rights to water. It argues for clearer recognition of the role of private law actions in such a system. At the national level it documents the history of the conflicts which have shaped the administration of inter-State rivers as a background to the integrated enquiries of other research students.