Nationhood, Executive Power and the Australian Constitution
The first comprehensive study of the nature and scope of the nationhood power, this book brings a fresh perspective to the scholarship on the powers of the executive branch in Australia.

The question of when the Federal Executive Government can act without the authorisation of the Parliament is contested and highly topical in Australia. In recent judicial decisions, Australian courts have suggested that statutory authorisation may not be required where the Federal Executive Government is exercising the nationhood power; that is, the implied executive power derived from the character and status of the Commonwealth as the national government.

The Federal Executive Government has relied on this power to implement controversial spending programs, respond to national emergencies and exclude non-citizens from Australia. Together, the chapters in this book analyse and evaluate judicial observations about the operation of the nationhood power in these different contexts and the limits which apply to it.

While the focus of this book is on the nationhood power, it also addresses broader issues concerning the relationship between the legislative and executive branches in parliamentary systems of government. This book makes an important contribution to the literature on executive power and will appeal to constitutional lawyers, scholars and practitioners and those who are involved in the administration of government.
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Nationhood, Executive Power and the Australian Constitution
The first comprehensive study of the nature and scope of the nationhood power, this book brings a fresh perspective to the scholarship on the powers of the executive branch in Australia.

The question of when the Federal Executive Government can act without the authorisation of the Parliament is contested and highly topical in Australia. In recent judicial decisions, Australian courts have suggested that statutory authorisation may not be required where the Federal Executive Government is exercising the nationhood power; that is, the implied executive power derived from the character and status of the Commonwealth as the national government.

The Federal Executive Government has relied on this power to implement controversial spending programs, respond to national emergencies and exclude non-citizens from Australia. Together, the chapters in this book analyse and evaluate judicial observations about the operation of the nationhood power in these different contexts and the limits which apply to it.

While the focus of this book is on the nationhood power, it also addresses broader issues concerning the relationship between the legislative and executive branches in parliamentary systems of government. This book makes an important contribution to the literature on executive power and will appeal to constitutional lawyers, scholars and practitioners and those who are involved in the administration of government.
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Nationhood, Executive Power and the Australian Constitution

Nationhood, Executive Power and the Australian Constitution

by Peta Stephenson
Nationhood, Executive Power and the Australian Constitution

Nationhood, Executive Power and the Australian Constitution

by Peta Stephenson

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Overview

The first comprehensive study of the nature and scope of the nationhood power, this book brings a fresh perspective to the scholarship on the powers of the executive branch in Australia.

The question of when the Federal Executive Government can act without the authorisation of the Parliament is contested and highly topical in Australia. In recent judicial decisions, Australian courts have suggested that statutory authorisation may not be required where the Federal Executive Government is exercising the nationhood power; that is, the implied executive power derived from the character and status of the Commonwealth as the national government.

The Federal Executive Government has relied on this power to implement controversial spending programs, respond to national emergencies and exclude non-citizens from Australia. Together, the chapters in this book analyse and evaluate judicial observations about the operation of the nationhood power in these different contexts and the limits which apply to it.

While the focus of this book is on the nationhood power, it also addresses broader issues concerning the relationship between the legislative and executive branches in parliamentary systems of government. This book makes an important contribution to the literature on executive power and will appeal to constitutional lawyers, scholars and practitioners and those who are involved in the administration of government.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781509942336
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Publication date: 09/08/2022
Series: Hart Studies in Constitutional Law
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 200
File size: 624 KB

About the Author

Peta Stephenson is Lecturer at the School of Law at Queensland University of Technology, Australia.
Peta Stephenson is Lecturer at the School of Law at Queensland University of Technology, Australia.

Table of Contents

Part I Executive Power in Australia
1. Introduction
2. The Executive Power of the Commonwealth
Part II The Scope of the Nationhood Power
3. The Development of the Nationhood Power in the Australian Case Law
4. The Nationhood Power and the Use of the Armed Forces During Emergencies
5. The Nationhood Power and Border Protection
Part III Limitations on the Nationhood Power
6. Federalism as a Limit on the Nationhood Power
7. Conclusion
Bibliography
Index
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