The Critical Judgments Project: Re-reading Monis v The Queen

Author:   Rosalind Dixon ,  Rosalind Dixon
Publisher:   Federation Press
ISBN:  

9781760020750


Pages:   256
Publication Date:   28 October 2016
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
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The Critical Judgments Project: Re-reading Monis v The Queen


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Overview

BRODLIM x JULIEN RAYNAUD Le Penseur 2015 Kashmiri embroidery 80 cm X 80 cm Reproduced with permission of the artist, Julien Raynaud and BRODLIM (c) BRODLIM & Julien Raynaud www.brodlim.com www.julienraynaudart.com \nThis book introduces students to a number of critical legal perspectives and demonstrates how such perspectives might be used to influence and reimagine existing legal doctrines. It extends the seminal Feminist Judgments Project and adapts it specifically for the purpose of teaching critical legal thinking. Each chapter provides extracts and commentary on the prominent thinkers within the critical discipline before a leading critical scholar rewrites the judgment in the famous 2013 decision of the High Court of Australia, Monis v The Queen, informed and reimagined through this perspective. \nThe case required the High Court to engage with deep issues about the role of free speech in democracy, the appropriate role of the state in regulating civility of discourse and protecting vulnerable groups, and the ongoing influence of gender and race in approaching these issues. The decision was the first in which the Court split over the relevant issues along gender lines. The saliency of the identity of the judges in the case makes it natural for introducing students to the idea that who judges are, and how they understand notions of constitutional justice, may matter to the resolution of concrete constitutional questions. \nThe book builds on the seminal work undertaken in the Feminist Judgments Project by pluralising not just the feminist critique, but the wider range of critical perspectives brought to the judicial method. The critical perspectives in this project include feminism and the public-private divide, anti-subordination feminism, critical race theory, queer theory/post-structural feminism, law and literature, political liberalism, intersectional theory, law and economics, restorative justice and deliberative democratic theory.

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Author:   Rosalind Dixon ,  Rosalind Dixon
Publisher:   Federation Press
Imprint:   Federation Press
Weight:   0.328kg
ISBN:  

9781760020750


ISBN 10:   1760020753
Pages:   256
Publication Date:   28 October 2016
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  College/higher education ,  Professional & Vocational ,  Tertiary & Higher Education
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

Table of Contents

Foreword by The Hon Justice Margaret A McMurdo AC Special Thanks Acknowledgments About the Contributors Table of Cases Table of Statutes 1. Critical Thinking in Constitutional Law and Monis v The Queen Gabrielle Appleby and Rosalind Dixon 2. Law and Literature - Analysing Style in Judgment Writing Gabrielle Appleby and Heather Roberts 3. Feminism and the Public-Private Divide Margaret Thornton 4. Anti-Subordination Feminism Beth Gaze 5. Queer Theory and Poststructuralist Feminism Anne Macduff and Wayne Morgan 6. Critical Race Theory and the Constitutionality of Hate Speech Regulation Katharine Gelber 7. Intersectional Theory: Where Gender Meets Race, Ethnicity and Violence Megan Davis 8. An International Human Rights Law Perspective Andrew Byrnes 9. A Capabilities Approach Rosalind Dixon 10. Political Liberalism Denise Meyerson 11. Deliberative Democracy Peter Burdon and Alexander Reilly 12. A Restorative Justice Approach Melanie Schwartz and Anna Olijnyk 13. Preventive Justice Tamara Tulich 14. Law and Economics Richard Holden 15. Critical Judging Margaret Davies Index

Reviews

The prevailing legal realist school of thought holds that judging involves not merely the application of facts to law but, at least in hard cases, it is also influenced by the values, background and life experiences of each judge hearing the case. On that premise, critiques of judicial decisions are from time to time advanced from perspectives said to differ from those of the judge who decided them. This interesting book, inspired by the feminist judgments project, takes this school of thought to a logical conclusion. Associate Professor Gabrielle Appleby and Professor Rosalind Dixon of UNSW have invited a number of leading scholars to draft a seventh judgment for the now infamous High Court case of Monis v The Queen (2013) 249 CLR 92. Each contributor adopts a particular critical viewpoint in drafting his or her judgment . The editors justify their choice of the decision in Monis on three bases. First, it involved a difficult constitutional question, namely the application of the doctrine of implied freedom of political communication. Second, the Court was constituted by only six judges and, remarkably, their Honours split 3:3 and along gender lines. Third, the case is of enduring public interest as a result of Mr Monis' actions in perpetrating the Martin Place siege in 2014, which directly resulted in the death of two innocent hostages. ... The Critical Judgments Project - Re-reading Monis v The Queen is commendable to anyone interested in understanding the relationship between specific perspectives or theoretical frameworks and judicial reasoning. Its editors challenge us to identify and assess the influence of personal, social, political and economic factors in the development of legal doctrine . - Queensland Law Reporter - 3 February 2017 - [2017] 04 QLR


Author Information

Dr Gabrielle Appleby is an Associate Professor at the University of New South Wales. She is the Co-director of The Judiciary Project at the Gilbert + Tobin Centre of Public Law. Gabrielle researches in public and constitutional law, and is particularly interested in the constitutional integrity of the exercise of public power and the regulation of the judicial branch. She has published widely in leading national and international journals. She has published a number of books, including The Tim Carmody Affair: Australia's Greatest Judicial Crisis (NewSouth Publishing, 2016); The Role of the Solicitor-General: Negotiating Law, Politics and the Public Interest (Hart Publishing, 2016), Government Accountability (Cambridge University Press, 2015), Australian Public Law (2nd ed, Oxford University Press, 2014) and Public Sentinels: A Comparative Study of Australian Solicitors-General (Ashgate Publishing, 2014). She is the Chief Investigator on the Australian Research Council Discovery Project, Law, Order and Federalism. Gabrielle has previously worked in the Queensland Crown Law office and the Victorian Government Solicitor's Office. Rosalind Dixon is a Professor of Law at the University of New South Wales. She is Director of the Gilbert + Tobin Centre of Public Law Comparative Constitutional Law Project, and Deputy Director of the Herbert Smith Freehills Initiative on Law and Economics. Her work focuses on comparative constitutional law and constitutional design, theories of constitutional dialogue and amendment, socio-economic rights and constitutional law and gender, and has been published in leading journals in the US, Canada, the UK and Australia, including the Cornell Law Review, University of Pennsylvania Journal of Constitutional Law, International Journal of Constitutional Law, American Journal of Comparative Law, Osgoode Hall Law Journal, Oxford Journal of Legal Studies and Sydney Law Review. She is Co-editor, with Tom Ginsburg, of a leading handbook on comparative constitutional law, Comparative Constitutional Law (Edward Elgar, 2011), and a related volume, Comparative Constitutional Law in Asia (Edward Elgar, 2014), Co-editor (with Mark Tushnet and Susan Rose-Ackermann) of the Edward Elgar series on Constitutional and Administrative Law, on the editorial board of the Public Law Review, Journal of Institutional Studies, and Associate Editor of the Constitutions of the World series for Hart publishing. She previously served as an Assistant Professor at the University of Chicago Law School.

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