Journal Updates
Content updates
Criminal Law Journal update: Vol 45 Pt 3
The latest Part of the Criminal Law Journal includes the following articles:
- Injustice Arising from the Unnoticed Power of Priming: How Lawyers and Even Judges can be Misled by Unreliable Transcripts of Indistinct Forensic Audio – Helen Fraser and Yuko Kinoshita
- Check Your Privilege: The Foundation of Legal Professional Privilege within the Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions – Adam Murphy
- The Use of Victim Impact Statements in Sexual Offence Sentencing: A Critique of Judicial Practice – Rhiannon Davies and Lorana Bartels
Also in this Part are the following sections:
- Editorial: "The Burden and Standard of Proof"
- Contemporary Comment: "Affirmative Consent in New South Wales: Progressive Reform or Dangerous Populism?" – Andrew Dyer
- Digest of Criminal Law Cases
Journal of Judicial Administration update: Vol 30 Pt 4
The latest Part of the Journal of Judicial Administration includes the following articles:
- Aggravating and Mitigating Factors in Sexual and Non-sexual Violent Cases – Kate Warner, Lorana Bartels, Julia Davis, Lynne Roberts, Caroline Spiranovic and Karen Gelb
- Expanding ADR in Our Courts: Mediation and the Judiciary – Alexander Xynas
Public Law Review update: Vol 32 Pt 2
The latest Part of the Public Law Review includes the following articles:
- Legislative Amendment Directed towards a Particular Individual, Company and Dispute: The Separation of Powers and Other Constitutional Issues – Anthony Gray
- The Duality of Jurisdictional Error: Central (to Justifying Entrenched Judicial Review of Executive Action) and Pivotal (to Review Doctrine) – Emily Hammond
- The Systemic Nature of Convention and Its Implications for Judicial Enforcement – Edward Willis
Also in this Part are the following sections:
- Comments: "Court Fees and Access to Justice in Australia" – Jack Maxwell; "Minister for Home Affairs v Benbrika (2021) 95 ALJR 166; [2021] HCA 4" – Sarah Murray and Tamara Tulich; and "Legal Perspectives on Border Closures and Freedom of Movement in Australia’s COVID-19 Response" – Matthew Stubbs
- Developments