Table of Contents
Table of Contents
Table of Contents
List of Contributors
Acknowledgements
[Introduction]
Introduction
Daniel Halliday and Matthew Harding
[Chapter 1]
What Does it Mean to ‘Act Charitably’? Revisiting the Purposes and Activities Distinction in Charity Law
Adam Parachin
[Chapter 1 Comment]
Purposes, Activities and the Continued Importance of Charity Modes of Action
Ian Murray
[Chapter 2]
Too Private to Be Charitable: Difficulties in Drawing the Line in Charity Law
Debra Morris
[Chapter 2 Comment]
Too Private to Be Charitable: Commentary on Debra Morris’s Chapter
Jennifer Batrouney AM QC
[Chapter 3]
Public Benefit and Charitable Class
Lloyd Hitoshi Mayer
[Chapter 3 Comment]
Comment on Public Benefit and Charitable Class
Matthew Harding
[Chapter 4]
Public Benefit and Public Policy: Keeping up with Discrimination?
Myles McGregor-Lowndes
[Chapter 4 Comment]
Commentary on Public Benefit and Public Policy: Keeping up with Discrimination?
Matthew Turnour and Elizabeth Shalders
[Chapter 5]
A No-Benefit Benefit Test: When, If Ever, Should Benefit Be Presumed or Assumed in Charity Law?
Mary Synge
[Chapter 5 Comment]
A No-Benefit Benefit Test: Comment
Pauline Ridge
[Chapter 6]
Weighing Benefits and Detriments in the Law of Charities
Jane Calderwood Norton
[Chapter 6 Comment]
Some Further Reflections on Incommensurability, Public Benefit, and Autonomy: Commentary on Weighing Benefits and Detriments in the Law of Charities
Daniel Halliday
[Chapter 7]
Public Reason, Public Benefit, and ‘Political’ Charities
Patrick Emerton
[Chapter 7 Comment]
Comment on Public Reason, Public Benefit, and ‘Political’ Charities
Jennifer L Beard
[Chapter 8]
Issues and Problems with the Application of the Public Benefit Test in New Zealand Law
Sue Barker
[Chapter 8 Comment]
Comment: Purpose and Public Benefit
Rosemary Teele Langford
Index