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A Novel Approach To History: Arnold Bennett, Marie Corelli And The Interior Lives Of Single Middle-Class Women, England, 1880-1914, Sharon Crozier-De Rosa Nov 2003

A Novel Approach To History: Arnold Bennett, Marie Corelli And The Interior Lives Of Single Middle-Class Women, England, 1880-1914, Sharon Crozier-De Rosa

Faculty of Law, Humanities and the Arts - Papers (Archive)

There are many ‘gaps’ or ‘silences’1 in women’s history – especially in relation to their interior lives. Historians seeking to penetrate the thoughts and emotions of ‘ordinary’ single middle-class women living during the Late Victorian and Edwardian years have a challenging task. These women rarely left personal documents for historians to analyse. Novels, particularly popular or bestselling novels, represent one pathway into this realm. Popular novels are numbered among the few written sources that are available to help historians to fill in some of the absences in the conventional historical record. I have chosen a selection of the novels of …


Defining Native Title - Indigenous Cultural Knowledge And The Native Title Act, E. Arcioni Jan 2003

Defining Native Title - Indigenous Cultural Knowledge And The Native Title Act, E. Arcioni

Faculty of Law - Papers (Archive)

This article argues that the definition of native title in the Native Title Act 1993 (Cth) has been interpreted by the High Court to contain at least two restrictions. This argument is advanced through an examination of the protection of Indigenous cultural knowledge by the native title regime. Part 1 outlines a definition of cultural knowledge, establishes a proposed categorisation of rights in relation to that knowledge and identifies arguments for their protection. Part 2 introduces the Native Title Act 1993 (Cth) in the context of the development of native title jurisprudence in Australia, sets out the statutory definition of …


Out Damned Weeds! Weed Management In Australia – Keeping Them At Bay, E. Arcioni Jan 2003

Out Damned Weeds! Weed Management In Australia – Keeping Them At Bay, E. Arcioni

Faculty of Law - Papers (Archive)

Weeds have long been identified as a threat to agriculture and human health and, more recently, as a threat to the environment. In order to address these threats, a two-pronged approach is required, encompassing the prevention of weed introductions and the control of existing weed infestations. Regulation is necessary to achieve this control. The regulatory and policy regimes for both prevention and management of weeds are analysed, with a particular focus on the scope and implementation of week management under the Noxious Weeds Act 1993 (NSW). The legislation relating to the prevention and management of weeds is found to be …


Individualism And Collectivism In Agreement-Making Under Australian Labour Law, Andrew D. Frazer Jan 2003

Individualism And Collectivism In Agreement-Making Under Australian Labour Law, Andrew D. Frazer

Faculty of Law - Papers (Archive)

Australia, in common with many other industrialised countries in the 1990s, has experienced a shift towards individualism in labour law and labour market regulation. This has been part of a wider change as governments have opened up domestic markets to international competition, while rethinking the protections provided by the welfare state. Business has demanded deregulation of all kinds but particularly in the labour market, with the aim of achieving greater flexibility and efficiency in the utilisation of labour. The debate over the reform of industrial relations institutions and processes in Australia has been conducted in terms of ‘enterprise bargaining’, a …


Globalisation, Federalism And Legal Pluralism: The Challenges Of Diverse Legal Cultures In Federal Systems, J. M. Marychurch Jan 2003

Globalisation, Federalism And Legal Pluralism: The Challenges Of Diverse Legal Cultures In Federal Systems, J. M. Marychurch

Faculty of Law - Papers (Archive)

Australia has recently had to address the structure of corporate law and regulation as a result of decisions in two High Court cases, namely Re Wakim; Ex Parte McNally (1999) 198 CLR 511 and R v Hughes (2000) 171 ALR 155. The constitutional problems posed by these two cases have currently been resolved using a referral of powers by the states to the Commonwealth. However, this agreement was not reached without difficulty, and uncertainty persists due to a five year sunset clause. The intense debate surrounding these events shed light on the continuing diversity in political and legal culture in …


Report On Pacific Islands Judges Symposium On Sustainable Development, G. L. Rose Jan 2003

Report On Pacific Islands Judges Symposium On Sustainable Development, G. L. Rose

Faculty of Law - Papers (Archive)

Report on the Pacific Islands Judges Symposium on Environmental Law and Sudstainable DevThe Pacific Islands Judges Symposium on Environmental Law and Sustainable Development was held over three days, 5-7 February 2002. The aim of the Symposium was to bring together judges from the region for information exchange, between themselves and experts in environmental law, and for discussion of potential roles of the judiciary in decision making for sustainable development. It was one in a series of judicial symposia on environmental law organised by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP). Other regions where such symposia have been held include Africa (1995), …


Before The High Court: Politics, Police And Proportionality - An Opportunity To Explore The Large Test: Coleman V Power, E. Arcioni Jan 2003

Before The High Court: Politics, Police And Proportionality - An Opportunity To Explore The Large Test: Coleman V Power, E. Arcioni

Faculty of Law - Papers (Archive)

On 26 March 2000, Patrick Coleman stood in the Townsville Mall and handed out leaflets with the following printed on them: ‘Get to know your local corrupt type coppers’, identifying Constable Brendan Power as one of the ‘slimy lying bastards’ the subject of Coleman’s attention. A number of police officers, including Constable Power, attended the scene and, following a struggle, Coleman was placed in a police vehicle. He was charged with distributing material with insulting words contrary to s7(1)(d)1 of the Vagrants Gaming and Other Offences Act 1931 (Qld) (hereinafter Vagrants Act), using insulting words contrary to s7A(1)(c)2 of the …


International Law Of Sustainable Agriculture In The 21st Century, G. L. Rose Jan 2003

International Law Of Sustainable Agriculture In The 21st Century, G. L. Rose

Faculty of Law - Papers (Archive)

This paper examines the new PGR Treaty, assessing what it contains that is innovative and what it contains that are repackaged existing arrangements. Therefore, the PGR Treaty is described in the context of the pre-existing arrangements and the political forces that shaped it. The examination commences by providing a historical perspective on the transfer and use of plant genetic resources. It introduces institutional arrangements that predate the Treaty and explains the relationships between them. In this, attention focuses on the International Undertaking on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture 1983 (International Undertaking) and the Treaty on Biological Diversity 1992 …


(Review) Critical Legal Positivism By Kaarlo Tuori, Richard Mohr Jan 2003

(Review) Critical Legal Positivism By Kaarlo Tuori, Richard Mohr

Faculty of Law - Papers (Archive)

Kaarlo Tuori, professor of law, judge, and counsellor to the Constitutional Committee of the Finnish Parliament, has embarked on an ambitious project. He aims to build on the positivism of Kelsen and Hart, but to discover a normative justification of law which goes beyond their limited validity claims. This is the ‘critical’ element which he adds to ‘legal positivism’. Kelsen’s basic norm and Hart’s rule of recognition are irreducible underlying principles. The arbitrary nature of such principles is intellectually suspect, while their internal self referentiality renders them morally sterile. The law is the law — because we recognise it as …


Law And Identity In Spatial Contests, Richard Mohr Jan 2003

Law And Identity In Spatial Contests, Richard Mohr

Faculty of Law - Papers (Archive)

Law has had a traditional reference to land, conceived as territory, in the notion of a jurisdiction, where the law of the land applies equally to all individuals. Recent critiques of this view have suggested that a plurality of laws may apply in particular places. How this spatial pluralism impacts on dominant views of law is considered through two instances in which law has interacted with competing conceptions of place and territory in relations between European and Indigenous Australians. Space, law and identity are seen to constitute each other in complex forms. Indigenous beliefs and practices challenge the claims to …


Enforcing Bycatch Reduction In Trawl Fisheries: Legislating For The Use Of Turtle Exclusion Devices, Warwick Gullett Jan 2003

Enforcing Bycatch Reduction In Trawl Fisheries: Legislating For The Use Of Turtle Exclusion Devices, Warwick Gullett

Faculty of Law - Papers (Archive)

The mandatory use of bycatch reduction devices (BRDs) in prawn trawl fisheries is now commonplace in Australia. BRDs are designed to allow unwanted or juvenile species to escape fishing nets with consequent benefits for the abundance of such species, species which prey on them, and general ecosystem integrity. In the Queensland East Coast Trawl Fishery, as well as in a handful of other Australian prawn trawl fisheries, specific turtle excluder devices (TEDs) are required to prevent turtles from entering the codend section of trawl nets. This article reviews international and Australian legal measures to protect turtles from prawn trawl fishing …


U.S And Russia's Naval Policy After 9.11, Sam Bateman Jan 2003

U.S And Russia's Naval Policy After 9.11, Sam Bateman

Faculty of Law - Papers (Archive)

TIns paper was required to address the following questions:

• In what ways do maritime interests and strategies of the U. S. and Russia contribute to the general security outlook towards the Asia-Pacific region after 9.11 ?

• To what extent do the maritime strategies of these two countries take a cooperative approach toward the nations of the region?

• Is the present level of bilateral or multilateral cooperation adequate and sufficient to meet these challenges to maintain regional security?

These questions require a focus on the maritime interests and strategies of twn countries. The first is the sole remaining …


Maritime Security: A New Environment Following September 11, Sam Bateman Jan 2003

Maritime Security: A New Environment Following September 11, Sam Bateman

Faculty of Law - Papers (Archive)

The Asia-Pacific region is distinctly maritime in character. When we centre a globe on the Pacific Ocean, the blue of the ocean almost obscures the littoral landmasses but spin the globe until it is centred on the mid-Atlantic and landmasses then dominate the oceans. Not surprisingly, Atlantic nations tend towards a continental view of security while Asia-Pacific nations have a maritime view. The importance of maritime security to many Asia-Pacific countries is reflected in the size of their merchant shipping fleets, a dependence on seaborne trade, expanding naval forces, and strongly promoted claims to offshore sovereignty and marine resources. Maritime …


Regional Planning For Sustainability, David Farrier Jan 2003

Regional Planning For Sustainability, David Farrier

Faculty of Law - Papers (Archive)

The concept of ecologically sustainable development has been incorporated into a number of pieces of legislation (Stein, 2000) and environmental planning instruments in New South Wales. There is a significant question, however, as to whether its incorporation is anything more than pure symbolism. This paper begins by exploring the limited role played by ESD principles in decision-making processes under existing legislation, as a prelude to a more detailed analysis of what commitment to ESD principles should mean for such processes. It focuses in particular on the implications of such a commitment at the holistic level of environmental and natural resources …


Hydrographic Surveys And Marine Scientific Research: Differences, Overlaps And Implications, Sam Bateman Jan 2003

Hydrographic Surveys And Marine Scientific Research: Differences, Overlaps And Implications, Sam Bateman

Faculty of Law - Papers (Archive)

International law is clear on most issues associated with the conduct of marine scientific research (MSR) and hydrographic surveying but what is not clear is whether or not another State might conduct hydrographic surveys in an exclusive economic zone (EEZ) without the prior authorization of the coastal State. This paper reviews what is involved with MSR, hydrographic surveys and military surveys before reaching the conclusion that trends in recent decades with technology, the utility of hydrographic data and State practice require that hydrographic surveys in the EEZ should be under the jurisdiction of the coastal State. Paradoxically the arguments for …


Prompt Release Procedures And The Challenge For Fisheries Law Enforcement: The Judgement Of The International Tribunal For The Law Of The Sea In The 'Volga' Case (Russian Federation V Australia), Warwick Gullett Jan 2003

Prompt Release Procedures And The Challenge For Fisheries Law Enforcement: The Judgement Of The International Tribunal For The Law Of The Sea In The 'Volga' Case (Russian Federation V Australia), Warwick Gullett

Faculty of Law - Papers (Archive)

On 23 December 2002, the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea ('ITLOS') ordered the prompt release of the Russian 1ongline fishing vessel Volga, at the time detained by Australian authorities in Fremantle, upon the posting of a bond or other security of A$l 920 000. The Volga was arrested for allegedly fishing without authorisation by a boarding party from the Royal Australian Navy frigate HMAS Canberra in the Australian Exclusive Economic Zone ('EEZ') surrounding Heard and McDonald Islands in the Southern Ocean on 7 Februarv 2002. At issue in the ITLOS proceedings was not whether the activities of …


Legal Framework And Enforcement Experience Of Marine Protected Areas In Tasmania, New South Wales And Commonwealth Waters, Warwick Gullett Jan 2003

Legal Framework And Enforcement Experience Of Marine Protected Areas In Tasmania, New South Wales And Commonwealth Waters, Warwick Gullett

Faculty of Law - Papers (Archive)

With the exception of the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park, there have been no prosecutions for specific offences within marine protected areas (MPAs) in Australia at the federal level or in Tasmania and New South Wales. However, it cannot be assumed that compliance is responsible for this lack of prosecutions. Rather, in some cases, enforcement officers prosecute offences under more general provisions found in fisheries legislation than under provisions for specific offences created in MPAs. In other cases, there has been a long lag time between the declaration of MPAs and the adoption of comprehensive and effective legislative arrangements creating …


Maritime Conflict Prevention System: Some Ideas For An Action Plan, Sam Bateman Jan 2003

Maritime Conflict Prevention System: Some Ideas For An Action Plan, Sam Bateman

Faculty of Law - Papers (Archive)

This paper outlines some basic proposals for developing good order at sea. It suggests that the key to promoting cooperation and establishing an effective maritime conflict prevention system lies in developing wider maritime awareness in the region, including a greater appreciation of the complexities and problems of marine environmental management. In effect, this is similar to the need perceived in the U.S. for maritime domain awareness as an essential element of Homeland Security. It recognizes that comprehensive knowledge of what is happening at sea is an essential element of maritime security although at a regional level, this knowledge and understanding …


Orwell Y La Revolución Social: Instrucciones En Clave De Fábula Para Domar Al Pequeño Totalitario Que Todos Llevamos Dentro, Luis Gomez Romero Jan 2003

Orwell Y La Revolución Social: Instrucciones En Clave De Fábula Para Domar Al Pequeño Totalitario Que Todos Llevamos Dentro, Luis Gomez Romero

Faculty of Law, Humanities and the Arts - Papers (Archive)

I. Nota introductoria: Manifiesto urgente para liberar a Eric Arthur Blair de la prisión a que le han reducido los simplistas

Eric Arthur Blair —niño dotado de un nombre británico como pocos— nació el 25 de junio de 1903 en Montihori, Bengala; hijo de Richard Walmesley Blair, funcionario inglés del Departamento del Opio en el Servicio Civil de la India, y de Ida Blair, de origen francés. Probablemente, algún hipotético lector se estará preguntando por qué tendríamos que guardar memoria de un natalicio que sucedió, al tiempo que escribo estas líneas, casi cien años atrás. Para responder a esta cuestión …


Language Diversity In Europe: Can The Eu Prevent The Genocide Of The French Linguistic Minorities?, Henri A. Jeanjean Jan 2003

Language Diversity In Europe: Can The Eu Prevent The Genocide Of The French Linguistic Minorities?, Henri A. Jeanjean

Faculty of Law, Humanities and the Arts - Papers (Archive)

Introduction:

All references about France, be they about French language, French culture, French arrogance or French cuisine seem to indicate that this country is homogeneous, mono-lingua and mono-cultural. If we consider some of its regions we can note a huge linguistic and cultural diversity: Corsica is Italo-Roman, Brittany is Celtic, Flemish is spoken in the North of France, Alsace is Germanic, the language in the Basque region is pre Indo-European while Catalan and Occitan both form part of the "occitano-roman group, half way between Gallo-Roman and Ibero-Roman." According to the new Atlas of Endangered World Naguages published by UNESCO, all …


Of A 'Contested Ground' And An 'Indelible Stain': A Difficult Reconciliation Between Australia And Its Aboriginal History During The 1990s And 2000s, Lorenzo Veracini Jan 2003

Of A 'Contested Ground' And An 'Indelible Stain': A Difficult Reconciliation Between Australia And Its Aboriginal History During The 1990s And 2000s, Lorenzo Veracini

Faculty of Law, Humanities and the Arts - Papers (Archive)

This article proposes an interpretative narrative of the evolution of Aboriginal history as a scholarly enterprise during the 1990s and in more recent years. The 1990s were characterised by attempts to synthesise the interpretative traditions resulting from previous decades of scholarly activity. In more recent years, the debate has shifted dramatically, dealing specifically with the genocidal nature of white Australia's policy towards Aboriginal peoples. The most important passages in this process are associated with the 1992 Mabo decision by the Australian High Court and the publication of the Bringing them home report of 1997.


Displaced Mothers Respond: Intergenerational Responsibilities In And Around The Texts Of F.A. And Lily Brett, Gay Breyley Jan 2003

Displaced Mothers Respond: Intergenerational Responsibilities In And Around The Texts Of F.A. And Lily Brett, Gay Breyley

Faculty of Law, Humanities and the Arts - Papers (Archive)

Migration to Australia creates a site of encounter. On this site, 'migrants' and 'Australia' respond to and become each other, as they negotiate forms and levels of responsibility for their newly shared site. Citizens and non-citizens who have been displaced from distant sites of violence and persecution respond continually to intersections of current events and previous displacements, of children's questions and revived memories. Such intersections recur in moments of eating, sleeping, working, driving, talking and media consumption, among others, as the meetings of past and present, self and other, 'here' and 'there' suffuse daily interactions. Interactions range from those with …


La Narrativa Italoaustraliana Tra Prima E Seconda Generazione, Gaetano Rando Jan 2003

La Narrativa Italoaustraliana Tra Prima E Seconda Generazione, Gaetano Rando

Faculty of Law, Humanities and the Arts - Papers (Archive)

No abstract provided.


Genocide And Colonialism, Ii: Discussing A Recent International Conference On 'Genocide And Colonialism' And Its Implications For Australian Debates, Lorenzo Veracini Jan 2003

Genocide And Colonialism, Ii: Discussing A Recent International Conference On 'Genocide And Colonialism' And Its Implications For Australian Debates, Lorenzo Veracini

Faculty of Law, Humanities and the Arts - Papers (Archive)

Lorenzo Veracini reviews a recent international conference on 'Genocide and Colonialism' and its implications for Australian debates.


Promoting The Ideals Of Integration And Diversity. Media Coverage Of Special Olympics Australia, Stephen J. Tanner, Sandy Haswell, Mandy Lake Jan 2003

Promoting The Ideals Of Integration And Diversity. Media Coverage Of Special Olympics Australia, Stephen J. Tanner, Sandy Haswell, Mandy Lake

Faculty of Law, Humanities and the Arts - Papers (Archive)

Australia's media organisations have long had an obsession with the exploits of our sporting 'champions', both on and off the field. This coverage is often said to be a response to the demands of a sports-mad nation. In a society in which sport is often considered a symbol of unity and integration, this paper investigates whether the media (1) contributes to the spirit of diversity by covering sport involving people with intellectual disabilities, and (2) encourages greater awareness of disability issues by writing with authority and understanding, or instead promotes elitism by focusing on so-called 'real sports' that feature able-bodied …


From The Golden Courtesan, Shady Cosgrove Jan 2003

From The Golden Courtesan, Shady Cosgrove

Faculty of Law, Humanities and the Arts - Papers (Archive)

This is an excerpt from the sixth chapter of Shady Cosgrove's The Golden Courtesan. Set in the 1830s, the novel responds to Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre in a Rhysian tradition by exploring the life of Edward Rochester's mistress, Celine Varens. Celine was an opera dancer/courtesan and mother to Adele Varens (the child who inspired Jane's arrival at Thornfield). In this excerpt, Celine and Rochester have been engaged in a turbulent affair and Demi, a rival dancer, has just told Celine of Rochester's wife, Bertha/Antoinette. Celine is also pregnant with Rochester's child.


"Kissing The Noose Of Australian Democracy": Misplaced Faiths And Displaced Lives Converse Over Australia's Rising Fences, Gay Breyley Jan 2003

"Kissing The Noose Of Australian Democracy": Misplaced Faiths And Displaced Lives Converse Over Australia's Rising Fences, Gay Breyley

Faculty of Law, Humanities and the Arts - Papers (Archive)

No abstract provided.


"A Mirror For Men?" Idealised Depictions Of White Men And Gay Men In Japanese Women's Media, Mark Mclelland Jan 2003

"A Mirror For Men?" Idealised Depictions Of White Men And Gay Men In Japanese Women's Media, Mark Mclelland

Faculty of Law, Humanities and the Arts - Papers (Archive)

This paper argues that Japanese women's media which portray images of foreign (nearly always white) men and Japanese gay men as objects of desire and fascination for Japanese women function as rhetorical mirrors whose real intent is to reflect back the supposed deficiencies of 'traditional' Japanese men. The paper concludes that women's media are being used as a vehicle for anti-male rhetoric, a channel for an indirect discourse of complaint whose main purpose is to critique the perceived shortcomings of ordinary Japanese men.


Towards A Legal Framework For A Single National Ballast Water Management Scheme In Australia, Ben M. Tsamenyi, Stuart B. Kaye, Alison Castle Jan 2003

Towards A Legal Framework For A Single National Ballast Water Management Scheme In Australia, Ben M. Tsamenyi, Stuart B. Kaye, Alison Castle

Faculty of Law, Humanities and the Arts - Papers (Archive)

Introduced Marine Pests (IMPs) pose a serious threat to marine biodiversity in Australia. There are many ways pests are introduced into the marine environment. The major vectors for IMPs are ballast water, ship fouling, accidental introductions due to mariculture and deliberate introduction. The focus of this paper is on the administrative and legislative response to the introduction of IMPs through ballast water. Historically, ballast water accounts for only 15-20 per cent of the invasive marine species found in Australia. Ballast water is, however, becoming the major threatening vector in the last two decades. The current ballast water legislative and administrative …


'Friend To One, Enemy To Many?': The Time Of Foreign Policy Struggle In Papua New Guinea Under The Bill Skate Government, Kazuhiro Monden Jan 2003

'Friend To One, Enemy To Many?': The Time Of Foreign Policy Struggle In Papua New Guinea Under The Bill Skate Government, Kazuhiro Monden

Faculty of Law, Humanities and the Arts - Papers (Archive)

Since independence in 1975 Papua New Guinea (PNG) has adopted as its fundamental foreign policy position the principle that the country is 'friends to all and enemies to none.' When PNG foreign policy shifts from this principle the realist foundations of the Country's international relationships are challenged. Under the administration of Bill Skate from 1997-1999 such a shift came close to being realized as Papua New Guinean political players used foreign policy and diplomatic interests to justify or extend their domestic political and electoral interests.

This paper focuses on diplomatic events in PNG at the end of Bill Skate's Government, …