Public Law Review update: Vol 31 Pt 3
By journalalerts on October 19, 2020
Posted In: Journals Tagged: "We are not Epidemiologists": COVID-19 in the High Court alternative to the dominant binary approach Amelia Simpson Amy Chinnappa Anne Twomey articles Ben Fraser Bharan Narula Book reviews Borrowdale v Director-General of Health: An Unlawful but Justified National Lockdown Clare Langford Comments complex policy questions constitutional interpretation of the beliefs and intentions of the Delegates to the Conventions counter-terrorism law-making Dan Meagher data-driven contemporary political campaign developments digital campaigning direct democracy techniques disruption of traditional political processes Edward Willis election process Empowering Joint Commonwealth – State Royal Commissions through a National Applied Law Examining Digital Campaigning Through the Normative Framework Underpinning Election Law – The Rationale and Challenges of Regulation From Disruption to Deliberation: Improving the Quality and Impact of Community Engagement with Parliamentary Law-making Graeme Edgeler and Andrew Geddis Joint Commissions M B Rodriguez Ferrere marriage equality reform modern democracies normative rationale for regulation of digital campaigning parliamentary democracies PLR role of parliamentary committees in law-making and rights protection in Australia Sarah Moulds Sir Anthony Mason Stephen Donaghue QC The Constitution and Government of Australia 1788 to 1919 The Evolving Role of History in Constitutional Interpretation The Power(Lessness) of New Zealand's House of Representatives to Summon The Crown's Legal Advice The Veiled Sceptre: The Dismissal of Governments Thomas Wood traditional forms of community engagement trust among citizens in democratic institutions William Pitt Cobbett