Index

The Weight of Expectations: Ismail v Minister for Immigration, Citizenship and Multicultural Affairs [2024] HCA 2

Chris Honnery

In Ismail v Minister for Immigration, Citizenship and Multicultural Affairs [2024] HCA 2, a five-judge bench of the High Court sitting in its original jurisdiction considered the construction, validity, and operation of Direction 90, a written direction given by the Minister to guide decision‑makers in exercising powers under s 501 of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth).

This post focuses on two of the aspects of the High Court’s unanimous judgment that will have broader ramifications for decisions to refuse or cancel visas on character grounds.

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Juvenile offending, convictions and visa cancellation: Thornton and Lesianawai

Kate Bones

The deportation of people who have lived in Australia for most of their lives – since they were children, or sometimes infants – has become an increasing feature of Australian immigration law over the last few decades. Two recent decisions of the High Court address a particular aspect of that practice: the consideration in visa cancellation decisions of offences committed when a person was a child.

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What Does the Lasry Resignation Tell Us About Judicial Complaints Commissions?

Joe McIntyre

Justice Lex Lasry is a titan of the law in Victoria, with a well-deserved reputation for impeccable integrity, who leaves behind a ‘significant legacy’. But the resignation of Justice Lasry is a sad cautionary tale of the dangers of formal judicial complaints processes. These bodies exist to promote judicial accountability by allowing an easy mechanism of public complaint. But the potential for mechanisms to cause more harm than good cannot be dismissed.

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The allocation of merits review rights in Australia: anomaly and variation

Joel Townsend and Emily Singh

The abolition and replacement of the Administrative Appeals Tribunal ('the AAT') is a landmark moment in the development of Australian public law. It is not, however, a fundamental change when it comes to the form, operation and function of merits review in Australia. In fact, the approach to the abolition and replacement of the AAT affirms the model of merits review which has come to be commonplace, across Australian jurisdictions, over the course of five decades. The establishment of the Administrative Review Tribunal ('the ART') represents a continuation of that model, with some important tweaks (especially in the area of decision maker appointments processes).

While this process of replacement of Australia’s primary Federal merits review tribunal is as much a story of consistency as it is of change, it does not mean that there is perfect consistency in the Australian merits review landscape. The Administrative Review Tribunal Bill 2024 ('the ART Bill') and its companion legislation are focused on establishing a new tribunal, and do not effect substantial change to the primary legislation which confers the AAT (and will confer the ART) with jurisdiction to review government decisions of various types. There has long been, and will remain, variation in merits review rights which is, at least in some cases, not well justified. We argue in this post that there is reason for a wider examination of primary legislation, to consider whether there is value in pushing for greater consistency in the enjoyment of merits review rights.

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The Administrative Review Tribunal Bill: A missed opportunity for ending migration exceptionalism and creating a unified approach for administrative review

Daniel Ghezelbash, Mia Bridle and Keyvan Dorostkar

The introduction of the Administrative Review Tribunal Bill 2023 and associated Consequential and Transitional Provisions Bill provides a once-in-a-generation opportunity to redesign Australia’s federal administrative review system. The reforms will abolish the Administrative Appeals Tribunal (AAT) and replace it with the new Administrative Review Tribunal (ART).

In this post, we draw on data and analysis from the Kaldor Centre Data Lab to evaluate the design of the new ART, with a particular focus on decision-making within the MRD. It is important to note the analysis in this post is limited by the data which we were able to access through the freedom of information process and annual reports. Access to more detailed data would open opportunities for more robust analysis in relation to whether the bills will achieve the Government’s policy objectives and not have unintended consequences. It is essential that the new ART adopts a robust approach to data collection and transparency to enable ongoing evaluation of its operation and to identify areas in need of further reform.

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ART Appointments: Is this the start of something beautiful?

Joe McIntyre

Judicial (and quasi-judicial) appointments  are one of those topics that judicial scholars can get really animated about, but which for the majority of the public and political classes is a bit of a nothing burger. We are blessed in this country with a judiciary with a well-deserved high reputation for quality and integrity.

It takes something pretty extraordinary for the public to care about judicial appointments, and for the media to pay any attention. Unfortunately, the recent history of appointments to the AAT provides just such a cautionary tale.

This post unpacks that background context of the role politicised appointments played in the death of the AAT, before examining how the ART Bill reforms Tribunal appointment procedures. In the final part, it explores the potential broader implications of these new processes.

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Administrative law AUSPUBLAW Blog Administrative law AUSPUBLAW Blog

The Administrative Review Tribunal: A promising start

Ellen Rock

Administrative lawyers around Australia likely issued a collective—albeit tentative—sigh of collective relief when the government introduced its tribunal reform package into Parliament in 2023. There is a lot to like about the proposed Administrative Review Tribunal (ART). The ART Bill and First Consequential Bill, recently supplemented by the Second Consequential Bill, go a long way towards addressing the most pressing concerns that had prompted plans to abolish the Administrative Appeals Tribunal (AAT). The government has also taken the opportunity in these Bills to mop up a number of other longstanding administrative law bugbears.

While the proposed reforms are largely welcome, it would be surprising if plans on this scale were free of any shortcomings. This post highlights some of the key issues likely to attract attention in the coming months, including in the Senate Committee inquiry that is due to report in late July.

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Constitutional law AUSPUBLAW Blog Constitutional law AUSPUBLAW Blog

Constitutional Fixed Points & the Australian Constitution: Cass Sunstein on ‘How to Interpret the Constitution’

Rosalind Dixon

Cass Sunstein is well known to many readers – for his work on constitutional law and theory, but also (with Richard H Thaler) on 'nudges' and how government and private actors can make better decisions using the insights of social psychology and behavioural economics. On some measures, he is the most cited contemporary legal scholar, and so prolific that he is the lawyer’s equivalent of Kevin Bacon – the person we use to judge 'degrees of separation' in the academy.

Any new book by Sunstein is thus highly anticipated, and his new book on constitutional interpretation, How to Interpret the Constitution, does not disappoint. In this pithy new work, Sunstein provides an interesting and novel account of how to approach the interpretation of a written constitution.

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ChatGPT is not a paralegal: the professional implications for lawyers in using ChatGPT

Brenda Tronson

Open AI announced the release of ChatGPT-4 in late 2022, billing it as a revolutionary next step in 'artificial intelligence'. Many people around the world got stuck into finding out what this new tool could do. So, what ethical issues arise for a lawyer using ChatGPT-4, or a similar tool?

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The exclusion of aliens under federal law: Analysing the impact of NZYQ, Alexander and Benbrika

Sangeetha Pillai

The Australian Constitution has a rather infamous track record when it comes to exclusion. Sometimes it excludes through silence. For example, since 1967 there has been no mention of First Nations peoples within its pages. It has very little to say about rights protection. It makes no reference to a national citizenship (but it does mention foreign citizens, if only to exclude them from Parliament).

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NZYQ: Consistency, Continuity, and Human Rights

Harry Sanderson and Meghan Malone

The High Court alone has the power to overrule High Court authority. In NZYQ, the Court unanimously overruled its prior constitutional holding in Al-Kateb and held that ss 189(1) and 196(1) of the Migration Act, which allowed an unlawful non-citizen to be detained indefinitely, contravened Ch III of the Constitution.

In this respect the decision provides insight into the circumstances in which the Court will elect to reopen, and thereafter overrule, constitutional authority. It reaffirms that, in deciding whether to reopen and overrule a constitutional decision, the 'consistency and continuity' of that decision in light of subsequent jurisprudence will be the Court’s primary consideration. The Court’s reasoning also indicates that while other factors will remain relevant to its assessment of whether a constitutional holding should be reopened, these factors will bear less weight.

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NZYQ: A new style of unanimous judgment for the High Court of Australia

Stephen McDonald SC

Much has been, and will continue to be, written about the substance of NZYQ v MICMA and its implications, both political and legal. This post focusses on some notable features of the judgment itself: in particular, the presentation of a single judgment joined in by all Judges, but which identifies individual positions taken by some of those Judges.

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Beyond ‘quiet criticism’: Filling the gaps in government accountability post-Robodebt

Ruchira Abeyratna

The Robodebt Royal Commission Report, published in July 2023, was a sobering reminder of the dire consequences of ineffective government accountability. The Albanese Federal Government’s recent commitment to adopting all the recommendations of the Royal Commission, at least in principle, represents a potential step towards preventing future disastrous misadministration. However, healing the wounds inflicted by the Robodebt scheme requires more than political promises. It requires substantial reflection and discourse on how public institutions should operate to effectively hold the government accountable.

This article will posit that while the judiciary adequately scrutinised the government’s administration of Robodebt, its dispute-dependency meant that justice was far from immediate. Thus, non-judicial institutions must be adequately empowered to take proactive and rapid action when the government acts unlawfully or against the principles of good government. I advance two suggestions on how this can be achieved. Firstly, imposing a positive duty on the Ombudsman to act when it reasonably suspects unlawful or unprincipled governmental conduct. Secondly, bolstering the protection of non-judicial accountability institutions from governmental interference.

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In support of a statutory duty of care to mitigate the impact of climate change – a tripartite argument

Marco Rizzi, Fiona McGaughey and Alex Gardner

In August 2023, Senator David Pocock introduced to the Senate the Climate Change Amendment (Duty of Care and Intergenerational Climate Equity) Bill 2023 (Cth) (‘the Bill’), which seeks to establish a statutory duty of care to avert harm to the health and wellbeing of current and future Australian children by the Commonwealth Government when making decisions that may cause significant greenhouse gas emissions. The explanatory memorandum to the Bill describes climate change as ‘having increasingly significant impacts in Australia, in the Pacific region and across the globe’ and outlines how the damage to ‘Australia’s economic prosperity, environment, and our health and wellbeing is severe and getting worse’.

This post articulates how the Bill addresses key gaps and delays in common law and legislation, improves Australia’s compliance with international law, and has the potential to create a useful climate change mitigation governance tool.

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Re-Writing Section 90: Vanderstock and the new meaning of excise

Anne Twomey

An arresting opening line is essential if one is to entice readers into an intimidating tome. The High Court’s judgment in Vanderstock v Victoria [2023] HCA 30 (Vanderstock) is certainly a tome, concluding at paragraph [951] and page 384. But the arresting line does not appear until paragraph [8]. Journalists would call this ‘burying the lede’.

In paragraph [8], the joint judgment of Kiefel CJ, Gageler and Gleeson JJ explained that the cases of Capital Duplicators Pty Ltd v Australian Capital Territory (1993) 178 CLR 561 (Capital Duplicators [No 2]) and Ha v New South Wales (1997) 189 CLR 465 (Ha) should not be re-opened. This was because, they said, ‘the Court could not justify now taking the momentous step of unsettling the resultant constitutional doctrine’ set out in these cases and because the current federal-state financial arrangements are ‘not to be judicially disturbed’.

Why that is such an arresting, or perhaps more accurately breathtaking, statement is that the judgment proceeds to do precisely what it said it could not justify doing: establishing a new ‘high constitutional purpose’ for s 90; establishing a new test for an excise; extending excise to taxes related to the ownership, hiring or usage of goods, or indeed anything that affects the demand for goods, thereby creating high levels of uncertainty about the validity of State taxes; and up-ending existing Commonwealth-State financial relations.

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Citizenship stripping and the conception of punishment as an exclusively judicial function

Emily Hammond and Rayner Thwaites

Within the space of 18 months the High Court of Australia has delivered three judgments on the constitutional validity of ministerial powers to revoke citizenship. Benbrika v Minister for Home Affairs [2023] HCA 33 (‘Benbrika 2’), and Jones v Commonwealth of Australia [2023] HCA 34 (‘Jones’), handed down on 1 November 2023, join last year’s decision in Alexander v Minister for Home Affairs [2022] HCA 19 (‘Alexander’). Central to all three cases is the question: what constraints does Ch III of the Constitution impose on laws for citizenship deprivation?
In this post we explain how the authorities cohere to establish a clear structure for evaluating whether ministerial citizenship stripping powers comply with Ch III. Moreover, these cases further cement the proposition that by operation of Ch III, the Commonwealth cannot impose punishment on any basis other than breach of the law by past acts. This limitation on Commonwealth power to punish is emerging as the key organising principle for evaluating whether citizenship stripping powers — including judicial powers exercised by courts — are compatible with Ch III.

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Liberty, punishment and the power to detain: the fallout from NZYQ v Minister for Immigration, Citizenship and Multicultural Affairs

Laura John, Josephine Langbien and Sanmati Verma

Late in the afternoon on the final day of the hearing in NZYQ, Chief Justice Gageler announced that the High Court would ‘adjourn momentarily to consider the course it will take’. When the hearing resumed a mere 16 minutes later, the Chief Justice declared that ‘at least a majority of the Court’ considered that the detention of the plaintiff was unlawful. With that, the High Court overturned an almost 20-year legal precedent established in Al-Kateb that had permitted the Executive Government to detain non-citizens indefinitely. In the aftermath, a political and media furore saw the Albanese Government rush unprecedented laws through Parliament to create a shadow detention regime for those released from immigration detention.

This article charts the road from Al-Kateb to NZYQ, discusses the Parliament’s extraordinary legislative response and offers some thoughts on what might follow as the Government attempts to reformulate its approach to immigration detention. We warn that – in the aftermath of one of the most significant constitutional cases in decades – we should not continue further down a path that punishes people on the basis of their visa status. Instead, we should take this opportunity to overhaul a deeply flawed system.

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Revisiting the Rule of Law book forum - Author’s reply

Kristen Rundle

It is a real privilege to read and be given the opportunity to reply to this AusPubLaw book symposium on my Cambridge ‘Element’, Revisiting the Rule of Law. That each of Gabrielle Appleby, Megan Davis, Dylan Lino, Alex Reilly, Paul Burgess and Justice Angus Stewart took the time to take my efforts at explication, analysis and intellectual leadership seriously, and then reflect on their own academic and professional endeavours in association with those efforts, is the ultimate compliment to an author whose first priority in writing the work was that it be useful to others.

The little book with which we are here concerned came into being because the editors for the ‘Philosophy of Law’ series within the new Cambridge University Press ‘Elements’ project asked me to write the volume on ‘the rule of law’. My instructions were to provide a succinct and accessible overview of key ideas and debates within scholarship on the rule of law, as well as to suggest ways in which the boundaries of this received territory might be pushed in the direction of new frontiers of inquiry.

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The Necessity of Revisiting the Rule of Law and the Rise of Algorithmic Decision Making - Revisiting the Rule of Law book forum

Paul Burgess

I was not convinced that a small (66 page) book that – in addition to being written for a principal audience of students and teachers of legal and political thought – was written for ‘anyone who wants to understand more about how we think, speak, and write about the rule of law’ (at 3) could provide a creative approach or motivate substantive further academic ideas about the concept. I was wrong.

Across only three logically (yet innovatively structured) short parts, Kristen Rundle stimulates and provokes engagement with the concept of the Rule of Law in Revisiting the Rule of Law. The three parts – that first examine the methodology associated with theorising the Rule of Law before considering the entangled way in which the concept is frequently presented – culminate in a part that explores ‘what may be missing or under-examined within theoretical engagement’ (at 2) and identifies a need to revisit the Rule of Law.

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