The International Criminal Court (ICC) is a pillar of the international rule of law, but in recent months it has been rocked to its core. On 12 October, Burundi moved to become the first country to leave the international Court, as its parliament voted to withdraw...
Today marks the 40th anniversary of the Federal Court of Australia Act 1976 (Cth) receiving Royal Assent. Australia now has a flourishing and robust federal judiciary, but it was not always the case. Prior to the creation of the Federal Court, there were only three...
Today would have been former High Court Justice Sir Alan Taylor’s 115th birthday. Taylor was born in Newcastle, the fifth son of Walter, a customs officer born in England, and Lilias, born in Australia. The family moved to Sydney when Alan was about ten. He...
In the eighth post in our series of collaborative posts with New South Wales Young Lawyers’ International Law Committee, Louise Lau looks at the impeachment of Brazilian president Dilma Rousseff. Dilma Rousseff marks number 18 in a line of Latin American...
In a recent speech, Chief Justice French stated that ‘[r]easonableness in the exercise of official power may be regarded as an aspect of the rule of law.’ The Chief Justice was referring to the presumption that statutory power must be exercised reasonably. If...