Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-rcrh6 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-30T23:32:14.819Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Bibliography

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 November 2019

Arlie Loughnan
Affiliation:
University of Sydney
Get access

Summary

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Chapter
Information
Self, Others and the State
Relations of Criminal Responsibility
, pp. 266 - 297
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2019

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Bibliography

Aitken, J. ‘“The Horrors of Matrimony Among the Masses”: Feminist Representations of Wife Beating in England and Australia, 1870–1914’ (2007) 19(4) Journal of Women’s History 107–31.Google Scholar
Allan, G. ‘Friendship, Sociology and Social Structure’ (1998) 15(5) Journal of Social and Personal Relationships 685–702.Google Scholar
Allen, C. K. Law in the Making (London: Clarendon Press, 1927).Google Scholar
Allen, H. Justice Unbalanced: Gender, Psychiatry and Judicial Decisions (Milton Keynes: Open University Press, 1987).Google Scholar
Allen, J. A. Sex and Secrets: Crimes Involving Australian Women since 1880 (Melbourne: Oxford University Press, 1990).Google Scholar
Angelides, S. ‘The Emergence of the Paedophile in the Late Twentieth Century’ (2005) 36 Historical Studies 272–95.Google Scholar
Arrow, M. ‘Making Family Violence Public in the Royal Commission on Human Relationships, 1974–1977’ (2018) 33(95) Australian Feminist Studies 81–96.Google Scholar
Arrow, M.Public Intimacies: The Royal Commission on Human Relationships 1974–1977’, in Featherstone, L., Jennings, R. and Reynolds, R. (eds.), Acts of Love and Lust: Sexuality in Australia from 1945–2010 (Newcastle: Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2014), pp. 23–43.Google Scholar
Arrow, M. and Woollacott, A. ‘Introduction – How the Personal Became Political: The Gender and Sexuality Revolutions in 1970s Australia’ (2018) 33(95) Australian Feminist Studies 1–8.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ashworth, A. ‘Interpreting Criminal Statutes: A Crisis of Legality?’ (1991) 107 Law Quarterly Review 419–49.Google Scholar
Ashworth, A. Positive Obligations in Criminal Law (London: Bloomsbury, 2013).Google Scholar
Ashworth, A. ‘The Making of the English Criminal Law (4) Blackstone, Foster and East’ [1978] Criminal Law Review 389–99.Google Scholar
Ashworth, A. ‘Towards a Theory of Criminal Legislation’ (1989) 1(1) Criminal Law Forum 41–63.Google Scholar
Ashworth, A. and Horder, J. Principles of Criminal Law, 7th ed. (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013).Google Scholar
Ashworth, A. and Zedner, L. Preventive Justice (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014).Google Scholar
Ayling, J. ‘Pre-emptive Strike: How Australia Is Tackling Outlaw Motorcycle Gangs’ (2011) 36(3) American Journal of Criminal Justice 250–64.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bagaric, M. ‘The High Court on Crime in 2010: Analysis and Jurisprudence’ (2011) 35 Criminal Law Journal 5–20.Google Scholar
Banivanua-Mar, T. ‘Consolidating Violence and Colonial Rule: Discipline and Protection in Colonial Queensland’ (2005) 8(3) Postcolonial Studies 303–19.Google Scholar
Barry, J. V. Alexander Maconochie of Norfolk Island: A Study of a Pioneer in Penal Reform (Melbourne: Oxford University Press, 1958).Google Scholar
Barry, J. V. ‘Criminal Law: The General Part’ (1954) 27 The Australian Law Journal 736–7.Google Scholar
Barry, J. V. ‘Criminal Law, The General Part’ (1962) 35 The Australian Law Journal 352.Google Scholar
Barry, J. V. ‘Insanity in the Criminal Law in Australia’ (1943) 21 Canadian Bar Review 427–39.Google Scholar
Barry, J. V. Insanity in the Criminal Law in Australia (English Studies in Criminal Science) (London: Macmillan, 1943).Google Scholar
Barry, J. V. ‘The Defence of Insanity and the Burden of Proof’ [1939] Res Judicatae 42–9.Google Scholar
Barry, J. V. and Paton, G. W. (with Sawer, G.), An Introduction to the Criminal Law in Australia (London: Macmillan, 1948).Google Scholar
Bartels, L. and Easteal, P. ‘Mothers Who Kill: The Forensic Use and Judicial Reception of Evidence of Postnatal Depression and Other Psychiatric Disorders in Australian Filicide Cases’ (2013–14) 37 Melbourne University Law Review 297–341.Google Scholar
Bavin-Mizzi, J.Understandings of Justice: Australian Rape and Carnal Knowledge Cases, 1877–1924’, in Kirkby, D. (ed.), Sex, Power and Justice: Historical Perspectives of Law in Australia (Melbourne: Oxford University Press, 1995), pp. 19–32.Google Scholar
Bayly, C. A.European Political Thought and the Wider World During the Nineteenth Century’, in Jones, G. S. and Claeys, G. (eds.), Cambridge History of Nineteenth Century Political Thought (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2011), pp. 835–63.Google Scholar
Beck, U. Risk Society: Towards a New Modernity, trans. Ritter, Mark (London: Sage Publications, 1992) [Risikogesellschaft: Auf dem Weg in eine andere Moderne] (first published 1986).Google Scholar
Beck, U. and Beck-Gernsheim, E. Individualization Institutionalized: Individualism and Its Social and Political Consequences (London: Sage Publications, 2002).Google Scholar
Behrendt, L. ‘Consent in a (Neo)colonial Society: Aboriginal Women as Sexual and Legal “Other”’ (2000) 15(33) Australian Feminist Studies 353–67.Google Scholar
Beier, A. L. Masterless Men: The Vagrancy Problem in England 1560–1640 (London: Methuen, 1985).Google Scholar
Bell, D.Empire and Imperialism’, in Jones, G. S. and Claeys, G. (eds.), Cambridge History of Nineteenth Century Political Thought (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2011), pp. 864–92.Google Scholar
Bell, V. ‘Keeping the Criminal Law in “Serviceable Condition”: A Task for the Courts or the Parliament?’ (2016) 27(3) Current Issues in Criminal Justice 335–44.Google Scholar
Bellamy, S.Guthrie, Bessie Jean (1905–1977)’, in Ritchie, J. (ed.), Australian Dictionary of Biography Volume 14: 1940–1980 (Melbourne: Melbourne University Press, 1996).Google Scholar
Bennett, C. ‘The Emergence of Australia’s National Campaign Against Drug Abuse: A Case-Study in the Politics of Drug Control’ (2008) 32(3) Journal of Australian Studies 309–21.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Benson, P.Feeling Crazy: Self-Worth and the Social Character of Responsibility’, in Mackenzie, C. and Stoljar, N. (eds.), Relational Autonomy: Feminist Perspectives on Autonomy, Agency, and the Social Self (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000), pp. 72–93.Google Scholar
Benton, L. A. Law and Colonial Cultures: Legal Regimes in World History, 1400–1900 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002).Google Scholar
Bialestock, D. ‘Neglected Babies: A Study of 289 Babies Admitted Consecutively to a Reception Centre’ (1966) 2(24) Medical Journal of Australia 1129–33.Google Scholar
Birrell, R. G. and Birrell, J. H. ‘The “Maltreatment Syndrome” in Children’ (1966) 2(24) Medical Journal of Australia 1134–8.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Blackstone, W. Commentaries on the Laws of England in Four Books, Book 1 (Philadelphia: J.B. Lippincott Co., 1893 [first published in 1768]).Google Scholar
Blumenthal, S. L. Law and the Modern Mind: Consciousness and Responsibility in American Legal Culture (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2016).Google Scholar
Borick, K. ‘Report on the Brisbane Seminar’ (1991) Criminal Law Forum 515–25.Google Scholar
Boucher, E. Empire’s Children: Child Emigrations, Welfare, and the Decline of the British World, 1869–1967 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2014).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Breckenridge, J.Intervention in Child Welfare: An Inflicted Evil or Solicited Response?’, in Wearing, M. and Berreen, R. (eds.), Welfare & Social Policy in Australia: The Distribution of Advantage (Sydney: Harcourt Brace, 1994), pp. 137–53.Google Scholar
Brett, P. An Inquiry into Criminal Guilt (Sydney: Law Book Co., 1963).Google Scholar
Brett, P. and Waller, P. Cases and Materials in Criminal Law (Oxford: Butterworths, 1962).Google Scholar
Bronitt, S.Australia’, in Heller, K. J. and Dubber, M. D. (eds.), Handbook of Comparative Criminal Law (Stanford, CA: Stanford Law Books, 2011).Google Scholar
Bronitt, S.New Regulatory Paradigms for Preventing Institutional Child Sexual Abuse: Lessons from Corporate Crime and White-Collar Criminals’, in Smaal, Y., Kaladelfos, A. and Finnane, M. (eds.), The Sexual Abuse of Children: Recognition and Redress (Melbourne: Monash University Press, 2016), pp. 178–92.Google Scholar
Bronitt, S. and Gani, M.Criminal Codes in the 21st Century: The Paradox of the Liberal Promise’, in McSherry, B., Norrie, A. and Bronitt, S. (eds.), Regulating Deviance: The Redirection of Criminalisation and the Futures of Criminal Law (Oxford: Hart, 2009), pp. 235–60.Google Scholar
Bronitt, S. and McSherry, B. Principles of Criminal Law, 4th ed. (Sydney: Thomson Reuters, 2017).Google Scholar
Brown, D.Constituting Physical and Fault Elements: A NSW Case Study’, in Crofts, T. and Loughnan, A. (eds.), Criminalisation and Criminal Responsibility in Australia (Melbourne: Oxford University Press, 2015), pp. 13–32.Google Scholar
Brown, D. ‘Criminalisation and Normative Theory’ (2013) 25(2) Current Issues in Criminal Justice 605–25.Google Scholar
Brown, D., Farrier, D., McNamara, L. et al. Criminal Laws: Materials and commentary on Criminal Law and Process of NSW, 6th ed. (Sydney: The Federation Press, 2015).Google Scholar
Brown, D. H. The Genesis of the Canadian Criminal Code of 1892 (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1989).Google Scholar
Brown, N. Governing Prosperity: Social Change and Social Analysis in Australia in the 1950s (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995).Google Scholar
Bumiller, K. In an Abusive State: How Neoliberalism Appropriated the Feminist Movement against Sexual Violence (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2008).Google Scholar
Burgess, A. ‘The Changing Character of Public Inquiries in the (Risk) Regulatory State’ (2011) 6(1) British Politics 3–29.Google Scholar
Burton, K., Crofts, T. and Tarrant, S. Principles of Criminal Law in Queensland and Western Australia, 2nd ed. (Sydney: Thomson Reuters, 2016).Google Scholar
Bush, B. ‘A Model Code?’ (2009) 7(2) Of Substance: The National Magazine on Alcohol, Tobacco and Other Drugs 18–19.Google Scholar
Byran, M. ‘The Modern History of Law Reporting’ (2012) 11 University of Melbourne Collections 32–36.Google Scholar
Byrne, P. J. Criminal Law and Colonial Subject, New South Wales, 1810–1830 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1993).Google Scholar
Cadoppi, A. and Cullinane, K. ‘Translation: The Zanardelli Code and Codification in the Countries of the Common Law’ (2000) 7 James Cook University Law Review 119–90.Google Scholar
Cairns, D. J. A. Advocacy and the Making of the Adversarial Criminal Trial, 1800–1865 (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1998).Google Scholar
Cairns, J. W. ‘Development of Comparative Law in Great Britain’ in Reimann, M. and Zimmermann, R. (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Comparative Law (Oxford: Oxford University Press 2006), pp. 132–73.Google Scholar
Cane, P. Controlling Administrative Power: An Historical Comparison (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2016).Google Scholar
Cane, P. Responsibility in Law and Morality (Oxford: Hart Publishing, 2002).Google Scholar
Carney, T. and Hanks, P. Social Security in Australia (Melbourne: Oxford University Press, 1994).Google Scholar
Carter, R. Criminal Law of Queensland (Melbourne: Butterworths, 1958).Google Scholar
Castles, A. An Australian Legal History (Sydney: Law Book Co., 1982).Google Scholar
Chalmers, J., Leverick, F. and Shaw, A. ‘Is Formal Criminalisation Really on the Rise? Evidence from the 1950s’ [2015] Criminal Law Review 177–99.Google Scholar
Chambers, D. New Social Ties: Contemporary Connections in a Fragmented Society (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2006).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chambliss, W. J. ‘A Sociological Analysis of the Law of Vagrancy’ (1964) 12(1) Social Problems 67–77.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chappell, D.A Review of Federal Law Enforcement Arrangements’, in Chappell, D. and Wilson, P. (eds.), Australian Policing, 2nd ed. (Sydney: Butterworths, 1996), pp. 126–46.Google Scholar
Chesterman, J. and Douglas, H. ‘Law on Australia’s Frontier: The Fall and Rise of Race’ (2009) 24 Canadian Journal of Law and Society 69–83.Google Scholar
Chiao, V. ‘Making Modern Criminal Law Theory: Reflections on Farmer’ (2017) 4(1) Critical Analysis of Law 1–10.Google Scholar
Christman, J. The Politics of Persons: Individual Autonomy and Socio-historical Selves (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009).Google Scholar
Clark, D. S. ‘Nothing New in 2000? Comparative Law in 1900 and Today’ (2000) 75 Tulsa Law Review 871–912.Google Scholar
Clough, J. ‘Bridging the Theoretical Gap: The Search for a Realist Model of Corporate Criminal Liability’ (2007) 18(3–4) Criminal Law Forum 267–300.Google Scholar
Coffee, J. C. ‘“No Soul to Damn: No Body to Kick”: An Unscandalized Inquiry into the Problem of Corporate Punishment’ (1981) 79(3) Michigan Law Review 386–459.Google Scholar
Coldrey, B. Good British Stock: Child and Youth Migration to Australia Research Guide (Canberra: National Archives of Australia, 1999).Google Scholar
Collier, J. F. Maurer, B. and Suarez-Navaz, L. ‘Sanctioned Identities: Legal Constructions of Modern Personhood’ (1995) 2(1–2) Identities: Global Studies in Culture and Power 1–27.Google Scholar
Columbia Law Review Association, ‘Journal of the Society of Comparative Legislation’ (Book Review) (1916) 16(4) Columbia Law Review 365–6.Google Scholar
Colvin, E. ‘Abusive Relationships and Violent Responses: The Reorientation of Self-Defense in Australia’ (2009) 42 Texas Tech Law Review 339–58.Google Scholar
Colvin, E. ‘Criminal Responsibility under the South Pacific Codes’ (2002) 26 Criminal Law Journal 98–113.Google Scholar
Colvin, E. ‘Unity and Diversity in Australian Criminal Law: A Comment on the Draft Commonwealth Code’ (1991) 15 Criminal Law Journal 82–94.Google Scholar
Connell, R. W. ‘The State, Gender and Sexual Politics: Theory and Appraisal’ (1990) 19 Theory and Society 507–44.Google Scholar
Cotterrell, R. Sociological Jurisprudence: Juristic Thought and Social Inquiry (London: Routledge, 2018).Google Scholar
Cossins, A. Female Criminality: Infanticide, Moral Panics and The Female Body (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2015).Google Scholar
Cossins, A. The Baby Farmers (Sydney: Allen and Unwin, 2013).Google Scholar
Cossins, A. ‘The Legacy of the Makin Case 120 Years On: Legal Fictions, Circular Reasoning and Some Solutions’ (2013) 35 Sydney Law Review 731–59.Google Scholar
Cowdery, N. ‘A Threat to the Rule of Law: The New South Wales Crimes (Criminal Organisations Control) Act 2009’ (2009) 21(2) Current Issues in Criminal Justice 321–4.Google Scholar
Craies, W. F. ‘Criminal Law in New South Wales’ (1901) 3(1) Journal of the Society of Comparative Legislation 95–7.Google Scholar
Cranston, R. ‘Law and Society: A Different Approach to Legal Education’ (1978–79) 5 Monash University Law Review 54–69.Google Scholar
Crofts, P. ‘Legal Irresponsibility and Institutional Responses to Child Sex Abuse’ (2016) 34(2) Law in Context: A Socio-Legal Journal 79–99.Google Scholar
Crofts, P., Crofts, T., Gray, S. et al. Waller and Williams Cases and Materials in Criminal Law, 13th ed. (Sydney: LexisNexis, 2015).Google Scholar
Crofts, T. ‘Two Degrees of Murder: Homicide Law Reform in England and Western Australia’ (2008) 8(2) Oxford University Commonwealth Law Journal 187–210.Google Scholar
Crofts, T. and Loughnan, A. ‘Provocation, NSW Style: Reform of the Defence of Provocation in NSW’ [2014] 2 Criminal Law Review 109–25.Google Scholar
Crofts, T. and Loughnan, A. ‘Provocation: The Good, the Bad and the Ugly’ (2013) 37(1) Criminal Law Journal 23–37.Google Scholar
Crofts, T. and Tarrant, S.Criminal Law Pedagogy and the Australian State Codes’, in Gledhill, K. and Livings, B. (eds.), The Teaching of Criminal Law: The Pedagogical Imperatives (Abingdon: Palgrave MacMillan, 2016), pp. 83–92.Google Scholar
Crofts, T. and Tyson, D. ‘Homicide Law Reform in Australia: Improving Access to Defences for Women Who Kill Their Abusers’ (2013) 39(3) Monash University Law Review 864–93.Google Scholar
Cross, G. ‘Labour in Settler-State Democracies: Comparative Perspectives on Australia and US, 1860–1920’ (1996) 70 Labour History 1–24.Google Scholar
Cross, R. ‘The Making of the English Criminal Law (5) Macaulay’ [1978] Criminal Law Review 519–28.Google Scholar
Cross, R. ‘The Making of the English Criminal Law (6) Sir James Fitzjames Stephen’ [1978] Criminal Law Review 652–61.Google Scholar
Cullinane, K. ‘Preface: The Zanardelli Code and Codification in the Countries of the Common Law’ (2000) 7 James Cook University Law Review 116–18.Google Scholar
Currey, C. H. ‘The Influence of the English Law Reformers of the Early Nineteenth Century on the Law of New South Wales’ (1937) XXIII Royal Australian Historical Society 227–41.Google Scholar
Curthoys, A.Indigenous Subjects’, in Schreuder, D. M. and Ward, S. (eds.), Australia’s Empire (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2008), pp. 79–103.Google Scholar
Daly, K. ‘Inequalities of Redress: Australia’s National Redress Scheme for Institutional Abuse of Children’ (2018) 42(2) Journal of Australian Studies 204–16.Google Scholar
Daly, K.Redress for Historical Institutional Abuse of Children’, in Deckert, A. and Sarre, R. (eds.), The Palgrave Handbook of Australian and New Zealand Criminology, Crime and Justice (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2017), pp. 449–66.Google Scholar
Davies, S.Captives of Their Bodies: Women, Law and Punishment, 1880s–1980s’, in Kirkby, D. (ed.), Sex, Power and Justice: Historical Perspectives on Law in Australia (Melbourne: Oxford University Press, 1995), pp. 99–115.Google Scholar
Davies, S. ‘Women War and the Violence of History: An Australian Perspective’ (1996) 2 Violence Against Women 359–77.Google Scholar
Deign, J. ‘On Rights and Responsibilities’ (1988) 7 Law and Philosophy 147–78.Google Scholar
Denning, A. T. ‘Foreword’ (1952) 1(1) International & Comparative Law Quarterly 1–2.Google Scholar
Diehl, J. B. S. ‘R. v. Wheat and Stocks. R. I. P.’ (1968) 31(5) The Modern Law Review 576–80.Google Scholar
Dixon, O. ‘A Legacy of Hadfield, McNaghten and Maclean’ (1957) 31 The Australian Law Journal 255–66.Google Scholar
Dixon, O. ‘Response to Questions’ (1957) 31 Australian Law Journal 265–6.Google Scholar
Dixon, O.Science and Judicial Proceedings’, in Barry, J. V. and Coates, A. E. (eds.), The Proceedings of the Medico-Legal Society of Victoria During the Years 1933–1934 and 1935–1936 (Melbourne: Brown, Prior, Anderson Pty. Ltd., 1937), pp. 1–31.Google Scholar
Dixon, O. ‘The Development of the Law of Homicide’ (1935) 9 Australian Law Journal (Supplement) 64–72.Google Scholar
Dolinko, D.Punishment’, in Deigh, J. and Dolinko, D. (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy of Criminal Law (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011), pp. 403–28.Google Scholar
Donovan, B. H. K. ‘The Committee for the Review of the Commonwealth Criminal Law’ (1992) 66 Australian Law Journal 732–7.Google Scholar
Dorsett, S. and Hunter, I. (eds.), Law and Politics in British Colonial Thought (London: Palgrave MacMillan, 2010).Google Scholar
Dorsett, S. and McVeigh, S. ‘Just So: “The Law Which Governs Australia Is Australian Law”’ (2002) 13 Law and Critique 289–309.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Douglas, H. ‘A Consideration of the Merits of Specialized Homicide Offences for Battered Women’ (2012) 45(3) Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology 367–82.Google Scholar
Douglas, H. ‘Customary Law, Sentencing and the Limits of the State’ (2005) 20(1) Canadian Journal of Law and Society/Revue canadienne Droit et Société 141–56.Google Scholar
Douglas, H. ‘Justice Kriewaldt, Aboriginal Identity and the Criminal Law’ (2002) 26 Criminal Law Journal 204–22.Google Scholar
Douglas, H. ‘The Cultural Specificity of Evidence: The Current Scope and Relevance of the Anunga Guidelines’ (1998) 21 University of New South Wales Law Journal 27–54.Google Scholar
Douglas, H. and Finnane, M. Indigenous Crime and Settler Law: White Sovereignty after Empire (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2012).Google Scholar
Douglas, R. and Laster, K. ‘A Matter of Life and Death: The Victorian Executive and the Decision to Execute 1842–1967’ (1991) 24 Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology 144–60.Google Scholar
Douglas-Scott, S. Law after Modernity. Series: Legal Theory Today (Oxford: Hart Publishing, 2013).Google Scholar
Dressler, J. ‘New Thoughts About the Concept of Justification in the Criminal Law: A Critique of Fletcher’s Thinking and Rethinking’ (1984–1985) 32(1) University of California Los Angeles Law Review 61–99.Google Scholar
Dubber, M. D. ‘Alan W. Norrie Punishment Responsibility and Justice: A Relational Critique’ (2002) 65(2) Modern Law Review 309–11.Google Scholar
Dubber, M. D. An Introduction to the Model Penal Code (New York: Oxford University Press, 2015).Google Scholar
Dubber, M. D.Colonial Criminal Law and Other Modernities: European Criminal Law in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Century’, in Pihlajamäki, H., Dubber, M. D. and Godfrey, M. (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of European Legal History (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2018), pp. 1052–73.Google Scholar
Dubber, M. D. ‘Historical Analysis of Law’ (1998) 16(1) Law and History Review 159–62.Google Scholar
Dubber, M. D. ‘New Historical Jurisprudence: Legal History as Critical Analysis of Law’ (2015) 2(1) Critical Analysis of Law 1–18.Google Scholar
Dubber, M. D.Paradigms of Penal Law’, in Dubber, M. D. and Hörnle, T. (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Criminal Law (New York: Oxford University Press, 2014), pp. 1017–39.Google Scholar
Dubber, M. D. ‘Penal Panopticon: The Idea of a Modern Model Penal Code’ (2000) 4(1) Buffalo Criminal Law Review 53–100.Google Scholar
Dubber, M. D. ‘Policing Possession: The War on Crime and the End of Criminal Law’ (2001) 91(4) The Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology 829–996.Google Scholar
Dubber, M. D.The Model Penal Code, Legal Process and the Alegitimacy of American Penality’, in Dubber, M. D. (ed.), Foundational Texts in Modern Criminal Law (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014), pp. 239–62.Google Scholar
Dubber, M. D. The Police Power: Patriarchy and the Foundations of American Government (New York: Columbia University Press, 2005).Google Scholar
Dubber, M. D. Victims in the War on Crime: The Use and Abuse of Victims’ Rights (New York: New York University Press, 2006).Google Scholar
Dubber, M. D. and Farmer, L.Introduction: Regarding Criminal Law Historically’, in Dubber, M. D. and Farmer, L. (eds.), Modern Histories of Crime and Punishment (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2007), pp. 1–14.Google Scholar
Duff, R. A. Answering for Crime: Responsibility and Liability in the Criminal Law (London: Hart Publishing, 2007).Google Scholar
Duff, R. A. Punishment, Communication, and Community (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2001).Google Scholar
Duff, R. A.Responsibility, Citizenship and Criminal Law’, in Duff, R. A. and Green, S. (eds.), Philosophical Foundations of Criminal Law (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011), pp. 125–48.Google Scholar
Duff, R. A. Trials and Punishment (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1986).Google Scholar
Duff, R. A., Farmer, L., Marshall, S. and Tadros, V. The Trial on Trial: Volume 3: Towards A Normative Theory of the Criminal Trial (London: Hart Publishing, 2007).Google Scholar
Duxbury, N. ‘English Jurisprudence Between Austin and Hart’ (2005) 91(1) Virginia Law Review 1–91.Google Scholar
Dyson, M. ‘Shorn-Off Complicity’ (2016) 75(2) The Cambridge Law Journal 196–9.Google Scholar
Eades, D. ‘Legal Recognition of Cultural Differences in Communication: The Case of Robyn Kina’ (1996) 16(3) Language & Communication 215–27.Google Scholar
Easteal, P., Bartels, L., Nelson, N. and Holland, K. ‘How Are Women Who Kill Portrayed in Newspaper Media? Connections with Social Values and the Legal System’ (2015) 51(1) Women’s Studies International Forum 31–41.Google Scholar
Edgely, M. and Marchetti, E. ‘Women Who Kill Their Abusers: How Queensland’s New Abusive Domestic Relationships Defence Continues to Ignore Reality’ (2011) 13(2) Flinders Law Journal 125–76.Google Scholar
Editor, ‘Malice Aforethought’ (1924) 33(5) Yale Law Journal 528–36.Google Scholar
Edney, R. and Bagaric, M. Australian Sentencing: Principles and Practice (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007).Google Scholar
Edwards, E. J., Hayes, R. A. and O’Regan, R. S. Cases on the Criminal Code: Being Cases and Material on the Criminal Law in Queensland, Western Australia and Papua and New Guinea (Sydney: Law Book Co., 1969).Google Scholar
Emsley, C. Crime and Society in England 1750–1900, 3rd ed. (Harlow, UK: Pearson, 2005).Google Scholar
Evans, C. ‘Excellent Women and Troublesome Children: State Foster Care in Tasmania, 1896–1918’ (2002) 83 Labour History 133–48.Google Scholar
Evans, C. L. ‘Persons Dwelling in the Borderland: Responsibility and Criminal Law in the Late-Nineteenth-Century British Empire’, PhD thesis, Princeton University (2016).Google Scholar
Evans, R.John William Bleakley (1879–1957)’, in Nairn, B. and Serle, G. (eds.), Australian Dictionary of Biography Volume 7: 1891–1939 (Melbourne: Melbourne University Press, 1979).Google Scholar
Fairall, P.The Reform of the Criminal Law’, in Chappell, D. and Wilson, P. (eds.), Crime and the Criminal Justice System in Australia: 2000 and Beyond (Sydney: Butterworths, 2000).Google Scholar
Farmer, L. ‘Bringing Cinderella to the Ball: Teaching Criminal Law in Context’ (2012) 58(5) Modern Law Review 756–66.Google Scholar
Farmer, L.Codification’, in Dubber, M. D. and Hörnle, T. (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Criminal Law (New York: Oxford University Press, 2014), pp. 379–98.Google Scholar
Farmer, L. Criminal Law, Tradition and Legal Order: Crime and the Genius of Scots Law, 1747 to the Present (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1997).Google Scholar
Farmer, L. ‘Criminal Responsibility and the Proof of Guilt’ (Working Paper, University of California Center for the Study of Law and Society Faculty, 2005).Google Scholar
Farmer, L.Criminal Responsibility and the Proof of Guilt’, in Dubber, M. D. and Farmer, L. (eds.), Modern Histories of Crime and Punishment (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2007), pp. 42–65.Google Scholar
Farmer, L.Criminal Wrongs in Historical Perspective’, in Duff, R. A., Farmer, L. L., Marshall, S. E., Renzo, M. and Tadros, V. (eds.), The Boundaries of the Criminal Law (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2010), pp. 214–37.Google Scholar
Farmer, L.Of Treatises and Textbooks: The Literature of Criminal Law in Nineteenth Century Britain’, in Dubber, M. and Fernandez, A. (eds.), Law Books in Action: Essays on the Anglo-American Legal Treatise (Oxford: Hart Publishing, 2012), pp. 145–64.Google Scholar
Farmer, L. ‘Making the Modern Criminal Law: A Response’ (2017) 4(1) Critical Analysis of Law 53–60.Google Scholar
Farmer, L. Making the Modern Criminal Law: Criminalization and Civil Order. Series: Criminalization (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2016).Google Scholar
Farmer, L. ‘Reconstructing the English Codification Debate: The Criminal Law Commissioners, 1833–45’ (2000) 18(2) Law and History Review 397–426.Google Scholar
Farmer, L. ‘Territorial Jurisdiction and Criminalization’ (2013) 63 University of Toronto Law Journal 225–46.Google Scholar
Farmer, L.The Modest Ambition of Glanville Williams’, in Dubber, M. D. (ed.), Foundational Texts in Modern Criminal Law (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014), pp. 263–77.Google Scholar
Farmer, L. ‘The Obsession with Definition: The Nature of Crime and Critical Legal Theory’ (1996) 5 Social & Legal Studies 57–73.Google Scholar
Farmer, L. ‘Time and Space in Criminal Law’ (2010) 13(2) New Criminal Law Review 333–56.Google Scholar
Featherstone, L. ‘“Children in a Terrible State”: Understandings of Trauma and Child Sexual Assault in 1970s and 1980s Australia’ (2018) 42(2) Journal of Australian Studies 164–76.Google Scholar
Featherstone, L. and Kaladelfos, A. ‘Hierarchies of Harm and Violence: Historicising Familial Sexual Violence in Australia’ (2014) 29(81) Australian Feminist Studies 306–24.Google Scholar
Featherstone, L. and Kaladelfos, A. Sex Crimes in the Fifties (Melbourne: Melbourne University Press, 2016).Google Scholar
Finn, J.Codification of the Criminal Law: The Australasian Parliamentary Experience’, in Godfrey, B. and Dunstall, G. (eds.), Crime and Empire, 1840–1940: Criminal Justice in Local and Global Context (Cullompton: Willan Publishing, 2005), pp. 224–37.Google Scholar
Finn, P. Law and Government in Colonial Australia (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1987).Google Scholar
Finnane, M. ‘Aboriginal Violence and State Response: Histories, Policies and Legacies in Queensland 1860–1940’ (2010) 43(2) Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology 238–62.Google Scholar
Finnane, M. ‘“Irresistible Impulse”: Historicizing a Judicial Innovation in Australian Insanity Jurisprudence’ (2012) 23(4) History of Psychiatry 454–68.Google Scholar
Finnane, M. JV Barry: A Life (Sydney: UNSW Press, 2007).Google Scholar
Finnane, M. ‘Law as an Intellectual Vocation’ (2015) 38(3) Melbourne University Law Review 1060–79.Google Scholar
Finnane, M. Police and Government: Histories of Policing in Australia (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1994).Google Scholar
Finnane, M. Punishment in Australian Society (Melbourne: Oxford University Press, 1997).Google Scholar
Finnane, M.The Limits of Jurisdiction: Law, Governance and Indigenous Peoples in Colonized Australia’, in Dorsett, S. and Hunter, I. (eds.), Law and Politics in British Colonial Thought (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2010), pp. 149–68.Google Scholar
Finnane, M. ‘The Origins of Criminology in Australia’ (2012) 45(2) Australia & New Zealand Journal of Criminology 157–78.Google Scholar
Finnane, M.The Politics of Police Powers: The Making of Police Offences Acts’, in Finnane, M. (ed.), Policing in Australia: Historical Perspectives (Sydney: New South Wales University Press, 1987), pp. 88–113.Google Scholar
Finnane, M. and Smaal, Y.Some Questions of History: Prosecuting and Punishing Child Sexual Assault’, in Smaal, Y., Kaladelfos, A. and Finnane, M. (eds.), The Sexual Abuse of Children: Recognition and Redress (Melbourne: Monash University Press, 2016), pp. 7–19.Google Scholar
Fisse, B. and Braithwaite, J. Corporations, Crime and Accountability (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1993).Google Scholar
Fitzpatrick, P.Terminal Legality: Imperialism and the (De)composition of Law’, in Kirkby, D. and Coleborne, C. (eds.), Law, History, Colonialism: The Reach of Empire (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2001), pp. 9–26.Google Scholar
Fitz-Gibbon, K. Homicide Law Reform, Gender and the Provocation Defence: A Comparative Perspective (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2014).Google Scholar
Fitz-Gibbon, K. and Stubbs, J. ‘Divergent Directions in Reforming Legal Responses to Lethal Violence’ (2012) 45(3) Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology 318–36.Google Scholar
Fletcher, G. Rethinking Criminal Law, 2nd ed. (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000).Google Scholar
Fletcher, G. The Grammar of Criminal Law: American, Comparative, and International: Volume 1: Foundations (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007).Google Scholar
Fletcher, G.The Nature of Justification’, in Horder, J. and Gardner, J. (eds.), Action and Value in Criminal Law (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1993), pp. 175–86.Google Scholar
Ford, L. Settler Sovereignty: Jurisdiction and Indigenous People in America and Australia 1788–1836 (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2010).Google Scholar
Forgarty, J. F. ‘Some Aspects of the Early History of Child Protection in Australia’ (2008) 78 Family Matters 52–9.Google Scholar
Foucault, M. Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the Prison (New York: Pantheon Books, 1977).Google Scholar
Fox, R. ‘New Crimes or New Responses?: Future Directions in Australian Criminal Law’ (2002) 28 Monash University Law Review 103–25.Google Scholar
Fricke, G. Judges of the High Court (Melbourne: Hutchinson, 1986).Google Scholar
Friedland, M. L. ‘R. S. Wright’s Model Criminal Code: A Forgotten Chapter in the History of the Criminal Law’ (1981) 1 Oxford Journal of Legal Studies 307–46.Google Scholar
Gani, M. ‘Codifying the Criminal Law: Implications for Interpretation’ (2005) 29 Criminal Law Journal 264–80.Google Scholar
Gans, J. Modern Australian Criminal Law (Melbourne: Cambridge University Press, 2012).Google Scholar
Gardner, J.On the General Part of Criminal Law’, in Duff, R. A. (ed.), Philosophy and the Criminal Law: Principle and Critique (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1998), pp. 205–56.Google Scholar
Gardner, J. ‘The Mark of Responsibility’ (2003) 23(2) Oxford Journal of Legal Studies 157–71.Google Scholar
Garland, D.Penal Modernism and Postmodernism’, in Blomberg, T. G. and Cohen, S. (eds.), Punishment and Social Control (New York: Walter de Gruyter, 2003), pp. 45–73.Google Scholar
Garland, D. Punishment and Welfare: A History of Penal Strategies (Aldershot: Gower, 1985).Google Scholar
Garland, D. The Culture of Control: Crime and Social Order in Contemporary Society (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2001).Google Scholar
Garran, R. R. and Quick, J. Annotated Constitution of the Australian Commonwealth (Sydney: Angus & Robinson, 1901).Google Scholar
Garton, S. Out of Luck: Poor Australians and Social Welfare 1788–1988 (Sydney: Allen and Unwin, 1990).Google Scholar
Garton, S. The Cost of War: Australians Return (Melbourne: Oxford University Press, 1996).Google Scholar
Genovese, A. ‘The Battered Body’ (1997) 12(25) Australian Feminist Studies 91–103.Google Scholar
Gerangelos, P., Lee, H. P., Aroney, N. et al. Winterton’s Australian Federal Constitutional Law: Commentary and Materials, 4th ed. (Sydney: Thomas Reuters, 2017).Google Scholar
Getzler, J.Law, History and the Social Sciences: Intellectual Traditions of the Late Nineteenth- and Early Twentieth-Century Europe’, in Lewis, A. and Lobban, M. (eds.), Law and History: Current Legal Issues Volume 6 (London: University College of London, 2003), pp. 215–63.Google Scholar
Giddens, A.Living in a Post-Traditional Society’, in Beck, U., Giddens, A. and Lash, S., Reflexive Modernisation: Politics, Tradition and Aesthetics in the Modern Social Order (Cambridge: Polity Press, 1994), pp. 56–109.Google Scholar
Giddens, A. Modernity and Self-Identity: Self and Society in the Late Modern Age (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1991).Google Scholar
Giddens, A. The Consequences of Modernity (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1990).Google Scholar
Giddens, A. The Third Way: The Renewal of Social Democracy (Cambridge: Polity Press, 1999).Google Scholar
Giddens, T. ‘Criminal Responsibility and the Living Self’ (2015) 9 Criminal Law and Philosophy 189–206.Google Scholar
Ginsberg, R. ‘Mighty Crime Victims: Victims’ Rights and Neoliberalism in the American Conjuncture’ (2014) 28(5–6) Cultural Studies 911–46.Google Scholar
Gleeson, K. ‘Exceptional Sexual Harms: The Catholic Church and Child Sexual Abuse Claims in Australia’ (2017) 27(6) Social & Legal Studies 1–21.Google Scholar
Gleeson, K. ‘Responsibility and Redress: Theorising Gender Justice in the Context of Catholic Clerical Child Sexual Abuse in Ireland and Australia’ (2016) 39 University of New South Wales Law Journal 779–812.Google Scholar
Gleeson, K. ‘Why the Continuous Failures in Justice for Australian Victims and Survivors of Catholic Clerical Child Sexual Abuse?’ (2016) 28(2) Current Issues in Criminal Justice 239–50.Google Scholar
Golder, H. and Allen, J. ‘Prostitution in New South Wales 1870–1932: Restructuring an Industry’ (1979–1980) 18/19 Refractory Girl 17–24.Google Scholar
Golding, F. ‘Sexual Abuse as the Core Transgression of Childhood Innocence’ (2018) 42(2) Journal of Australian Studies 191–203.Google Scholar
Goldsmith, A. ‘Seeing Red: Legal Indifference on a Field of Pain and Death’ (2009) 34 Australian Journal of Legal Philosophy 228–33.Google Scholar
Goode, M.An Evaluation of Judicial Interpretations of the Australian Model Criminal Code’, in Chan, W. C., Wright, B. and Yeo, S. (eds.), Codification, Macaulay and the Indian Penal Code: The Legacies and Modern Challenges of Criminal Law Reform (Surrey: Ashgate Publishing, 2011), pp. 313–36.Google Scholar
Goode, M. ‘Codification of the Australian Criminal Law’ (1992) 16(1) Criminal Law Journal 5–19.Google Scholar
Goode, M. ‘Codification of the Criminal Law’ (2004) 28 Criminal Law Journal 226–36.Google Scholar
Goode, M. ‘Constructing Criminal Law Reform and the Model Criminal Code’ (2002) 26 Criminal Law Journal 152–66.Google Scholar
Goode, M. ‘Fault Elements’ (1991) 15 Criminal Law Journal 95–108.Google Scholar
Goode, M. ‘The Model Criminal Code Project’ (1997) 5(4) Australian Law Librarian 265–77.Google Scholar
Gordon, G. H. Criminal Law of Scotland, 2nd ed. (Edinburgh: W. Green & Son, 1978).Google Scholar
Grabosky, P. Sydney in Ferment: Crime, Dissent and Official Reaction, 1788 to 1973 (Canberra: ANU Press, 1977).Google Scholar
Gray, A. ‘Freedom of Association in the Australian Constitution and the Crime of Consorting’ (2013) 32 University of Tasmania Law Review 149–83.Google Scholar
Graycar, R. ‘Compensation for the Stolen Children: Political Judgments and Community Values’ (1997) 4(3) University of New South Wales Law Journal 24–7.Google Scholar
Green, A. W.The Baby – The Empire’s Asset’, in Report of the Proceedings of the Conference on Infant and Child Welfare (Sydney: W.C. Penfold & Co. Ltd, Printers, 1917), pp. 78–85.Google Scholar
Green, T. A. Freedom and Criminal Responsibility in American Legal Thought (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2014).Google Scholar
Green, T. A. ‘The Jury and Criminal Responsibility in Anglo-American History’ (2015) 9(3) Criminal Law and Philosophy 423–42.Google Scholar
Green, T. A. Verdict According to Conscience: Perspectives on the English Criminal Trial Jury (Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press, 1985).Google Scholar
Green, P., Ward, T. and Lasslett, K. ‘The Advance of State Crime Scholarship’ (2012) 1(1) State Crime Journal 1–7.Google Scholar
Griffin, T. ‘A Retrospective – Policy and Legislative Reform Themes in the Attorney-General’s Areas of Responsibility, 1991–2001’ (2003) 6(2) Flinders Journal of Law Reform 263–83.Google Scholar
Griffith, S.Criminal Responsibility: A Chapter from a Criminal Code’, in Report of the Seventh Meeting of the Australasian Association for the Advancement of Science (Sydney: Australasian Association for the Advancement of Science, 1898), pp. 895–903.Google Scholar
Hacking, I. ‘The Making and Molding of Child Abuse’ (1991) 17(2) Critical Inquiry 253–88.Google Scholar
Haebich, A. and Reece, R. H. W.Neville, Auber Octavius (1875–1954)’, in Serle, G. (ed.), Australian Dictionary of Biography Volume 11: 1891–1939 (Melbourne: Melbourne University Press, 1988).Google Scholar
Hall, R.The New Politics of the High Court: Breaking with Constitutional Tradition or Securing a Political Future?’ in Boreham, P., Stokes, G., and Hall, R. (eds.), The Politics of Australian Society: Political Issues for the New Century (Sydney: Pearson Longman, 2000).Google Scholar
Hall, S.The Meaning of New Times’, in Morley, D. and Chen, K. (eds.), Stuart Hall: Critical Dialogues in Cultural Studies (London: Routledge, 1996), pp. 222–36.Google Scholar
Hamilton, H. M. Hamilton and Addison, Criminal Law and Procedure, N.S.W. (Sydney: Law Book Co., 1921).Google Scholar
Harel, A.The Triadic Relational Structure of Responsibility: A Defence’, in Cruft, R., Kramer, M. H., and Reiff, M. R. (eds.), Crime, Punishment and Responsibility: The Jurisprudence of Antony Duff (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011), pp. 103–22.Google Scholar
Hart, H. L. A. Punishment and Responsibility (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1968).Google Scholar
Hart, H. L. A. . Punishment and Responsibility: Essays in the Philosophy of Law, 2nd ed. (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2008).Google Scholar
Hart, H. L. A. The Concept of Law, 3rd ed. (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012).Google Scholar
Heathcote, G. Feminist Dialogues on International Law (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2019).Google Scholar
Hemming, A. ‘It’s Time to Abolish Diminished Responsibility, the Coach and Horses’ Defence Through Criminal Responsibility for Murder’ (2008) 10 University of Notre Dame Australia Law Review 1–36.Google Scholar
Herlihy, J. M. and Kenny, R. G. An Introduction to Criminal Law in Queensland (Melbourne: Butterworths, 1978).Google Scholar
Hirst, J.Empire, State, Nation’, in Schreuder, D. M. and Ward, S. (eds.), Australia’s Empire (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2008), pp. 142–62.Google Scholar
Hogg, R. and Brown, D. Rethinking Law and Order (Sydney: Pluto Press, 1998).Google Scholar
Hogg, R. and Golder, H.Policing Sydney in the Late Nineteenth Century’, in Finnane, M. (ed.), Policing in Australia: Historical Perspectives (Sydney: New South Wales University Press, 1987), pp. 59–73.Google Scholar
Horder, J. Ashworth’s Principles of Criminal Law, 9th ed. (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2019).Google Scholar
Horder, J.Criminal Law’, in Cane, P. and Tushnet, M. (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Legal Studies (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003), pp. 226–49.Google Scholar
Horder, J. Criminal Misconduct in Office (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2018).Google Scholar
Horder, J. Provocation and Responsibility (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1992).Google Scholar
Horder, J. ‘Rethinking Non-fatal Offences against the Person’ (1994) 14(3) Oxford Journal of Legal Studies 335–51.Google Scholar
Hostettler, J. The Politics of Criminal Law Reform in the Nineteenth Century (Southampton, UK: Barry Rose Law Publishers, 1992).Google Scholar
Howard, C. ‘An Australian Letter – The Meaning of Accident’ [1965] Criminal Law Review 516–22.Google Scholar
Howard, C. Australian Criminal Law (Sydney: Law Book Co., 1982).Google Scholar
Howie, R. ‘Letter to the Editor’ (1996) 14 Australian Bar Review 87–9.Google Scholar
Hunter, I.Global Justice and Regional Metaphysics: On the Critical History of the Law of Nature and Nations’, in Dorsett, S. and Hunter, I. (eds.), Law and Politics in British Colonial Thought (London: Palgrave MacMillan, 2010), pp. 11–29.Google Scholar
Hunter, I. and Dorsett, S.Introduction’, in Dorsett, S. and Hunter, I. (eds.), Law and Politics in British Colonial Thought (London: Palgrave MacMillan, 2010), pp. 1–8.Google Scholar
Hunter, R.Contesting the Dominant Paradigm: Feminist Critiques of Liberal Legalism’, in Davies, M. and Munro, V. E. (eds.), The Ashgate Research Companion to Feminist Legal Theory (Farnham: Routledge, 2016), pp. 13–30.Google Scholar
Hunter, R. and Tyson, D. ‘The Implementation of Feminist Law Reforms: The Case of Post-provocation Sentencing’ (2017) 26(2) Social & Legal Studies 129–65.Google Scholar
Husak, D. Overcriminalization: The Limits of the Criminal Law (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2008).Google Scholar
Ibawoh, B. Imperial Justice: Africans in Empire’s Court (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013).Google Scholar
Irving, H.New South Wales’, in Irving, H. (ed.), The Centenary Companion to Australian Federation (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1999), pp. 19–92.Google Scholar
Jacobs, M. D. White Mother to a Dark Race: Settler Colonialism, Maternalism, and the Removal of Indigenous Children in the American West and Australia, 1880–1940 (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 2009).Google Scholar
Jain, N. Perpetrators and Accessories in International Criminal Law: Individual Modes of Responsibility for Collective Crimes (London: Bloomsbury Publishing, 2014).Google Scholar
James, J. C. H. ‘Modes of Legislation in the British Colonies: Western Australia’ (1899) 1(1) Journal of the Society of Comparative Legislation 70–4.Google Scholar
Jones, T. W.Finding Child Sex Abuse in the Archives: The Treatment of Sexually Offending Clergy in the Church of England, 1871–1960’, in Smaal, Y., Kaladelfos, A. and Finnane, M. (eds.), The Sexual Abuse of Children: Recognition and Redress (Melbourne: Monash University Press, 2016), pp. 45–57.Google Scholar
Joyce, R. B.Griffith, Sir Samuel Walker (1845–1920)’, in Nairn, B. and Serle, G. (eds.), Australian Dictionary of Biography Volume 9: 1891–1939 (Melbourne: Melbourne University Press, 1983).Google Scholar
Kadish, S. H. ‘Codifiers of the Criminal Law: Wechsler’s Predecessors’ (1978) 78 Columbia Law Review 1098–144.Google Scholar
Kaladelfos, A. ‘The Maliciousness of Rape’ (2016) 40 Criminal Law Journal 230–2.Google Scholar
Kaladelfos, A. ‘The Politics of Punishment: Rape and the Death Penalty in Colonial Australia, 1841–1901’ (2012) 9(1) History Australia 155–75.Google Scholar
Kayman, M. A. ‘A Memorial for Jeremy Bentham: Memory, Fiction and Writing the Law’ (2004) 15 Law and Critique 207–29.Google Scholar
Keith, K. J. ‘The Unity of the Common Law and the Ending of Appeals to the Privy Council’ (2005) 54 International & Comparative Law Quarterly 197–210.Google Scholar
Kelman, M. ‘Interpretive Construction in the Substantive Criminal Law’ (1981) 33 Stanford Law Review 591–673.Google Scholar
Kennedy, C. ‘Lindsay Farmer: Making the Modern Criminal Law: Criminalization and Civil Order’ (2017) 11 Criminal Law and Philosophy 637–44.Google Scholar
Kercher, B. ‘Alex Castles on the Reception of English Law’ (2003) 7 Australian Journal of Legal History 37–45.Google Scholar
Kercher, B. An Unruly Child: A History of Law in Australia (Sydney: Allen & Unwin, 1995).Google Scholar
Kercher, B. ‘R v. Ballard, R v. Murrell and R v. Bonjon’ (1998) 3(3) Australian Indigenous Law Report 410–25.Google Scholar
Kercher, B. ‘Recovering and Reporting Australia’s Early Colonial Case Law: The Macquarie Project’ (2000) 18(3) Law and History Review 659–65.Google Scholar
Kerr, L. ‘The Legitimate Scope of the Criminal Law: A Question for Legal History?’ (2017) 4(1) Critical Analysis of Law 11–21.Google Scholar
Kimber, J. ‘“A Nuisance to the Community”: Policing the Vagrant Woman’ (2010) 34(3) Journal of Australian Studies 275–93.Google Scholar
Kimber, J. ‘Poor Laws: A Historiography of Vagrancy in Australia’ (2013) 11(8) History Compass 537–50.Google Scholar
Kirby, M. ‘Criminal Law Futurology’ (2005) 17(1) Current Issues in Criminal Justice 122–36.Google Scholar
Kirby, M. ‘Editorial’ (2001) 25 Criminal Law Journal 181–3.Google Scholar
Kirby, M. ‘Why Has the High Court Become More Involved in Criminal Appeals?’ (2002) 23 Australian Bar Review 4–23.Google Scholar
Kirby, M. ‘Recollections of Sir Harry Gibbs’ (2005) 49(9) Quadrant 54–7.Google Scholar
Kirkby, C. ‘Review Article: Henry Maine and the Re-Constitution of the British Empire’ (2012) 75(4) Modern Law Review 655–73.Google Scholar
Kociumbas, J. ‘Azaria’s Antecedents: Stereotyping Infanticide in Late Nineteenth-Century Australia’ (2001) 13(1) Gender & History 138–60.Google Scholar
Kolsky, E. ‘Codification and the Rule of Colonial Difference: Criminal Procedure in British India’ (2005) 23(3) Law and History Review 631–83.Google Scholar
Kriewaldt, M. ‘The Application of the Criminal Law to the Aborigines of the Northern Territory of Australia’ (1960–1962) 5(1) University of Western Australia Law Review 1–50.Google Scholar
Kryger, M. ‘Compared to What?’ (2009) 34 Australian Journal of Legal Philosophy 241–7.Google Scholar
Kutz, C. Complicity: Ethics and Law for a Collective Age (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007).Google Scholar
Kutz, C.Responsibility’, in Coleman, J. and Shapiro, S. (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Jurisprudence and the Philosophy of Law (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004), pp. 548–87.Google Scholar
Lacey, N. A Life of H.L.A. Hart: The Nightmare and the Noble Dream (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2006).Google Scholar
Lacey, N.Character, Capacity, Outcome: Towards a Framework for Assessing the Shifting Pattern of Criminal Responsibility in Modern English Law’, in Dubber, M. D. and Farmer, L. (eds.), Modern Histories of Crime and Punishment (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2007), pp. 14–41.Google Scholar
Lacey, N.Contingency, Coherence and Conceptualism: Reflections on the Encounter between “Critique” and “Philosophy of the Criminal Law”’, in Duff, A. (ed.), Philosophy and the Criminal Law (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1998), pp. 9–59.Google Scholar
Lacey, N. ‘Feminist Legal Theory beyond Neutrality’ (1995) 48(2) Current Legal Problems 1–38.Google Scholar
Lacey, N. ‘Historicising Criminalisation: Conceptual and Empirical Issues’ (2009) 72(6) Modern Law Review 936–60.Google Scholar
Lacey, N. ‘Institutionalising Responsibility: Implications for Jurisprudence’ (2013) 4(1) Jurisprudence 1–19.Google Scholar
Lacey, N. In Search of Criminal Responsibility: Ideas, Interests, and Institutions (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2016).Google Scholar
Lacey, N. ‘In Search of the Responsible Subject: History, Philosophy and Social Sciences in Criminal Law Theory’ (2001) 64(3) Modern Law Review 350–71.Google Scholar
Lacey, N. ‘Jurisprudence, History and the Institutional Quality of Law’ (2015) 101 Virginia Law Review 919–45.Google Scholar
Lacey, N.Legal Constructions of Crime’, in Maguire, M., Morgan, R. and Reiner, R. (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Criminology, 4th ed. (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007), pp. 179–200.Google Scholar
Lacey, N.Philosophical Foundations of the Common Law: Social Not Metaphysical’, in Horder, J. (ed.), Oxford Essays in Jurisprudence (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000), pp. 17–39.Google Scholar
Lacey, N. ‘Philosophy, History and Criminal Law Theory’ (1998) 1 Buffalo Criminal Law Review 295–328.Google Scholar
Lacey, N. ‘Responsibility and Modernity in Criminal Law’ (2001) 9(3) Journal of Political Philosophy 249–76.Google Scholar
Lacey, N. ‘Scott Veitch: Law and Irresponsibility: On the Legitimation of Human Suffering’ (2009) 18(2) Social & Legal Studies 270–2.Google Scholar
Lacey, N. ‘Space, Time and Function: Intersecting Principles of Responsibility Across the Terrain of Criminal Justice’ (2007) 1(3) Criminal Law and Philosophy 233–50.Google Scholar
Lacey, N.The Resurgence of Character: Responsibility in the Context of Criminalization’, in Duff, R. A. and Green, S. (eds.), Philosophical Foundations of Criminal Law (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011), pp. 151–78.Google Scholar
Lacey, N. ‘Thomas Andrew Green: Freedom and Criminal Responsibility in American Legal Thought’ (2016) 79(6) Modern Law Review 1137–41.Google Scholar
Lacey, N. Unspeakable Subjects: Feminist Essays in Legal and Social Theory (Oxford: Hart Publishing, 1998).Google Scholar
Lacey, N.Violence, Ethics and Law: Feminist Reflections on a Familiar Dilemma’, in James, S. and Palmer, S. (eds.), Visible Women: Essays on Feminist Legal Theory and Political Philosophy (London: Hart Publishing, 2002), pp. 117–36.Google Scholar
Lake, M. and Reynolds, H. Drawing the Global Colour Line: White Men’s Countries and the International Challenge of Racial Equality (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2008).Google Scholar
Landa, D. and Lewis, C.Making the Police Accountable for Their Conduct’, in Chappell, D. and Wilson, P. (eds.), Australian Policing, 2nd ed. (Sydney: Butterworths, 1996), pp. 12–25.Google Scholar
Langbein, J. H. The Origins of the Adversary Criminal Trial (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003).Google Scholar
Langbein, J. H. Torture and the Law of Proof: Europe and England in the Ancient Regime (Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press, 1977).Google Scholar
Laster, K. ‘Arbitrary Chivalry: Women and Capital Punishment in Victoria, Australia 1842–1967’ (1994) 6(1) Women and Criminal Justice 67–95.Google Scholar
Lavi, S. and Schneebaum, G.Criminal Law and Sociology’, in Dubber, M. D. and Hörnle, T. (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Criminal Law (New York: Oxford University Press, 2014), pp. 152–72.Google Scholar
Law, J. and Urry, J. ‘Enacting the Social’ (2004) 33(3) Economy and Society 390–410.Google Scholar
Leader-Elliott, I. ‘Australian Letter’ [1969] Criminal Law Review 511–23.Google Scholar
Leader-Elliott, I. ‘Benthamite Reflections on Codification of the General Principles of Criminal Liability: Towards the Panopticon’ (2006) 9(2) Buffalo Criminal Law Review 391–452.Google Scholar
Leader-Elliott, I. ‘Elements of Liability in the Commonwealth Criminal Code’ (2002) 26 Criminal Law Journal 28–42.Google Scholar
Leader-Elliott, I. ‘The Australian Criminal Code: Time for Some Changes’ (2009) 37 Federal Law Review 205–36.Google Scholar
Lernestedt, C. ‘Vertical, Horizontal, Backwards, Forwards’ (2017) 4(1) Critical Analysis of Law 22–30.Google Scholar
Lernestedt, C. ‘Victim and Society: Sharing Wrongs, but in Which Roles?’ (2014) 8 Criminal Law and Philosophy 187–203.Google Scholar
Lloyd, G.Individuals, Responsibility and the Philosophical Imagination’, in Mackenzie, C. and Stoljar, N. (eds.), Relational Autonomy: Feminist Perspectives on Autonomy, Agency, and the Social Self (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000), pp. 112–23.Google Scholar
Lobban, M. The Common Law and English Jurisprudence 1760–1850 (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1991).Google Scholar
Lobban, M.Sociology, History and the “Internal” Study of Law’, in Nobles, R. and Schiff, D. (eds.), Law, Society and Community: Socio-Legal Essays in Honour of Roger Cotterrell (Farnham: Ashgate Publishing, 2014), pp. 39–59.Google Scholar
Loughnan, A. ‘Asking (Different) Responsibility Questions: Responsibility and Non-Responsibility in Criminal Law’ (2016) 4(1) Bergen Journal of Criminal Law and Criminal Justice 24–46.Google Scholar
Loughnan, A.From Carpetbag to Crucible: Reconceptualising Diminished Responsibility Manslaughter’, in Livings, B., Reed, A. and Wake, N. (eds.), Mental Condition Defences and the Criminal Justice System: Perspectives from Law and Medicine (Cambridge: Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2015), pp. 339–64.Google Scholar
Loughnan, A.Historicizing Criminal Responsibility’, in Flanders, C. and Hoskins, Z. (eds.), The New Philosophy of Criminal Law (Lanham: Rowman and Littlefield, 2015), pp. 133–51.Google Scholar
Loughnan, A.In Accordance with Modern Notions: Criminal Responsibility at the Turn of the Twentieth Century’, in Crofts, T. and Loughnan, A. (eds.), Criminalisation and Criminal Responsibility in Australia (Melbourne: Oxford University Press, 2015), pp. 157–75.Google Scholar
Loughnan, A. Manifest Madness: Mental Incapacity in Criminal Law (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012).Google Scholar
Loughnan, A.M’Naghten’s Case (1843)’, in Handler, P., Mares, H. and Williams, I. (eds.), Landmark Cases in Criminal Law (London: Hart Publishing, 2017), pp. 125–45.Google Scholar
Loughnan, A. ‘“Society Owes Them Much”: Veteran Defendants and Criminal Responsibility in Australia in the Twentieth Century’ (2015) 2(1) Critical Analysis of Law 106–34.Google Scholar
Loughnan, A. ‘The Legislation We Had to Have? The Crimes (Criminal Organisations Control) Act 2009 (NSW)’ (2009) 20(3) Current Issues in Criminal Justice 457–65.Google Scholar
Loughnan, A. ‘The Meta-Significance of Criminal Responsibility’ (2017) 4(1) Critical Analysis of Law 31–41.Google Scholar
Loughnan, A. ‘The Strange Case of the Infanticide Doctrine’ (2012) 32(4) Oxford Journal of Legal Studies 685–711.Google Scholar
Loughnan, A. ‘“The Very Foundations of Any System of Criminal Justice”: Criminal Responsibility in the Australian Model Criminal Code’ (2017) 6(3) International Journal for Crime, Justice and Social Democracy 8–24.Google Scholar
Loughnan, A. and Gless, S. ‘Understanding the Law on Intoxicated Offending: Principle, Pragmatism and Legal Culture’ (2016) 3(2) Journal of International and Comparative Law 345–73.Google Scholar
MacCormick, N. ‘Taking Responsibility Seriously’ (2005) 9(1) Edinburgh Law Review 168–75.Google Scholar
MacDonald, E. and Williams, G. ‘Combating Terrorism: Australia’s Criminal Code Since September 11, 2001’ (2007) 16(1) Griffith Law Review 27–54.Google Scholar
MacIntyre, S. Australia’s Boldest Experiment: War and Reconstruction in the 1940s (Sydney: NewSouth Publishing, 2015).Google Scholar
Mackenzie, G. ‘An Enduring Influence: Sir Samuel Griffith and his Contribution to Criminal Justice in Queensland’ (2002) 2(1) Queensland University of Technology Law and Justice Journal 53–63.Google Scholar
Mantena, K. Alibis of Empire: Henry Maine and the Ends of Liberal Imperialism (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2010).Google Scholar
Martin, D. L. ‘Retribution Revisited: A Reconsideration of Feminist Criminal Law Reform Strategies’ (1998) 26 Osgoode Hall Law Journal 151–88.Google Scholar
Mason, A. ‘Changing the Law in a Changing Society’ (1992) 18 Commonwealth Law Bulletin 1166–72.Google Scholar
Mason, G.Violence’, in Caine, B., Gatens, M., Grahame, E., Larbalestier, J., Watson, S. and Webby, E. (eds.), Australian Feminism: A Companion (Melbourne: Oxford University Press, 1998), pp. 337–44.Google Scholar
Matravers, M. ‘Responsibility and Choice’ (2002) 5(2) Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy 77–92.Google Scholar
Matravers, M. Responsibility and Justice (Cambridge: Polity Press, 2007).Google Scholar
Matravers, M. and Cocoru, A.Revisiting the Hart/Wootton Debate on Responsibility’, in Pulman, C. G. (ed.), Hart on Responsibility (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2014), pp. 129–53.Google Scholar
Matthews, J. J. Good and Mad Women: The Historical Construction of Femininity in Twentieth-Century Australia (Sydney: Allen and Unwin, 1984).Google Scholar
Mayall, J.Nationalism and Imperialism’, in Bell, T. and Bellamy, R. (eds.), Cambridge History of Twentieth Century Political Thought (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003), pp. 104–22.Google Scholar
McAlinden, A. ‘An Inconvenient Truth: Barriers to Truth Recovery in the Aftermath of Institutional Child Abuse in Ireland’ (2013) 33(2) Legal Studies 189–214.Google Scholar
McAlinden, A. and Naylor, B. ‘Reframing Public Inquiries as Procedural Justice for Victims of Institutional Child Abuse: Towards a Hybrid Model of Justice’ (2016) 38(3) Sydney Law Review 277–309.Google Scholar
McHugh, P. G. Aboriginal Societies and the Common Law: A History of Sovereignty, Status, and Self-determination (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004).Google Scholar
McKenna, J. Supreme Court of Queensland: A Concise History (Brisbane: University of Queensland Press, 2012).Google Scholar
McKenna, M. ‘Metaphors of Light and Darkness: The Politics of “Black Armband” History’ (1998) 25 Melbourne Journal of Politics 67–84.Google Scholar
McKenzie, G. ‘An Enduring Influence: Sir Samuel Griffith and his Contribution to Criminal Justice in Queensland’ (2002) 2(1) Queensland University of Technology Law Journal 53–64.Google Scholar
McLeod, A. ‘On the Origins of Consorting Laws’ (2013) 37(1) Melbourne University Law Review 103–42.Google Scholar
McNamara, L.Criminalisation Research in Australia: Building a Foundation for Normative Theorising and Principled Law Reform’, in Crofts, T. and Loughnan, A. (eds.), Criminalisation and Criminal Responsibility in Australia (Melbourne: Oxford University Press, 2015), pp. 33–51.Google Scholar
McSherry, B. ‘Terrorism Offences in the Criminal Code: Broadening the Boundaries of Australian Criminal Laws’ (2004) 27(2) UNSW Law Journal 354–72.Google Scholar
Meliá, M. C. ‘The Wrongfulness of Crimes of Unlawful Association’ (2008) 11(4) New Criminal Law Review: An International and Interdisciplinary Journal 563–89.Google Scholar
Mewett, A. W. ‘The Canadian Criminal Code, 1892–1992’ (1993) 72(1) The Canadian Bar Review 1–27.Google Scholar
Meyering, I. B. ‘Feminism in Sydney’s Suburbs: “Speaking Out”, Listening and ‘Sisterhood’ at the 1975 Women’s Commissions’ (2018) 33(95) Australian Feminist Studies 61–80.Google Scholar
Mitchell, T. ‘A Dilemma at the Heart of Criminal Law: The Summary Jurisdiction, Family Violence, and the Over-Incarceration of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples’ (2019) 45(2) University of Western Australia Law Review 136–165.Google Scholar
Mitchell, T. ‘Understanding the Summary Jurisdiction in NSW’, PhD thesis, University of Sydney (2017).Google Scholar
Moore, M. S. Placing Blame: A General Theory of the Criminal Law (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1997).Google Scholar
Moore, W. H. ‘The Australian Commonwealth Constitution’ (1903) 5(1) Journal of the Society of Comparative Legislation 115–31.Google Scholar
Moran, M.Reshaping Responsibility: The Emerging Private Law of Institutional Wrongs’, in Barker, K., Degeling, S., Fairweather, K. and Grantham, R. (eds.), Private Law and Power (Oxford: Hart Publishing, 2017), pp. 263–84.Google Scholar
Moran, M. ‘The Role of Reparative Justice in Responding to the Legacy of the Indian Residential Schools’ (2014) 64(4) University of Toronto Law Journal 529–65.Google Scholar
Morgan, J. ‘Homicide Law Reform and Gender: Configuring Violence’ (2012) 45(3) Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology 351–66.Google Scholar
Morgan, N. ‘Criminal Law Reform 1983–1995: An Era of Unprecedented Legislative Activism’ (1995) 25 University of Western Australia Law Review 283–300.Google Scholar
Morris, N. ‘A New Qualified Defence to Murder’ (1960) 1(1) Adelaide Law Review 23–52.Google Scholar
Morris, N. ‘An Australian Letter’ [1957] Criminal Law Review 389–94.Google Scholar
Morris, N. ‘An Australian Letter’ [1958] Criminal Law Review 520–8.Google Scholar
Morris, N. ‘The Slain Chicken Thief’ (1958) 2(3) Sydney Law Review 414–35.Google Scholar
Morris, N. and Hawkins, G. The Honest Politician’s Guide to Crime Control (Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press, 1970).Google Scholar
Morris, N. and Howard, C. Studies in Criminal Law (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1964).Google Scholar
Moses, A. D. ‘An Antipodean Genocide? The Origins of the Genocidal Moment in the Colonization of Australia’ (2000) 2(1) Journal of Genocide Research 89–106.Google Scholar
Mounk, Y. The Age of Responsibility: Luck, Choice and the Welfare State (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2017).Google Scholar
Mulqueeny, K. ‘Fault Elements from a Code Perspective’ (1991) 15 Criminal Law Journal 109–12.Google Scholar
Munday, R. ‘Annual Survey of Commonwealth Law 1977’ (1980) 39(2) Cambridge Law Journal 398–9.Google Scholar
Musgrove, N.The Role and Importance of History’, in Sköld, J. and Swain, S. (eds.), Apologies and the Legacy of Abuse of Children in ‘Care’: International Perspectives (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2015), pp. 147–58.Google Scholar
Naffine, N.Can Women be Legal Persons?’ in James, S. and Palmer, S. (eds.), Visible Women: Essays on Feminist Legal Theory and Political Philosophy (London: Hart Publishing, 2002), pp. 69–90.Google Scholar
Naffine, N. ‘Criminal Conversations: Farmer, Lacey and the New Social Scholarship’ (2016) 38(4) Sydney Law Review 505–17.Google Scholar
Naffine, N. Criminal Law and the Man Problem (London: Hart Publishing, 2019).Google Scholar
Naffine, N. Feminism and Criminology (Cambridge: Polity Press, 1997).Google Scholar
Naffine, N. ‘Human Agents in Criminal Law and Its Scholarship’ (2011) 35 Criminal Law Journal 51–6.Google Scholar
Naffine, N. ‘In Defence of the Responsible Subject’ (2009) 34 Australian Journal of Legal Philosophy 222–7.Google Scholar
Naffine, N. Law’s Meaning of Life: Philosophy, Religion, Darwin and the Legal Person (London: Hart Publishing, 2009).Google Scholar
Naffine, N. ‘Who Are Law’s Persons? From Cheshire Cats to Responsible Subjects’ (2003) 66(3) Modern Law Review 346–67.Google Scholar
Naffine, N. and Owens, R. (eds.), Sexing the Subject of Law (Sydney: Allen and Unwin, 1997).Google Scholar
Neal, D. The Rule of Law in a Penal Colony: Law and Power in Early New South Wales (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1991).Google Scholar
Nedelsky, J. Law’s Relations: A Relational Theory of Self, Autonomy, and Law (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011).Google Scholar
Nedelsky, J. ‘Reconceiving Autonomy: Sources, Thoughts and Possibilities’ (1989) 1 Yale Journal of Law and Feminism 7–36.Google Scholar
Nedelsky, J. ‘Reconceiving Rights as Relationship’ (1993) 1(1) Review of Constitutional Studies 1–26.Google Scholar
Nelken, D. ‘Critical Criminal Law’ (1987) 14(1) Journal of Law and Society 105–17.Google Scholar
Nelson, E. ‘Civilian Men and Domestic Violence in the Aftermath of the First World War’ (2003) 27 Journal of Australian Studies 97–108.Google Scholar
Neville Brown, L. ‘A Century of Comparative Law in England: 1869–1969’ (1971) 19(2) The American Journal of Comparative Law 232–52.Google Scholar
Norrie, A. Crime, Reason and History: A Critical Introduction to Criminal Law, 3rd ed. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2014).Google Scholar
Norrie, A. ‘Justice on the Slaughter-Bench: The Problem of War Guilt in Arendt and Jaspers’ (2008) 2 New Criminal Law Review 187–231.Google Scholar
Norrie, A.Legal Form and Moral Judgement: Euthanasia and Assisted Suicide’, in Duff, R. A., Farmer, L., Marshall, S. E., Renzo, M. and Tadros, V. (eds.), The Structures of Criminal Law (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011), pp. 134–57.Google Scholar
Norrie, A.Simulacra of Morality?: Beyond the Ideal/Actual Antinomies of Criminal Justice’, in Duff, A. (ed.), Philosophy and the Criminal Law: Principle and Critique (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1998), pp. 101–56.Google Scholar
Norrie, A. Punishment, Responsibility and Justice: A Relational Critique (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000).Google Scholar
Odgers, S. ‘Conspiracy to Commit a Commonwealth Offence’ (2010) 34 Criminal Law Journal 240–9.Google Scholar
Odgers, S. Principles of Federal Criminal Law, 4th ed. (Sydney: Thomson Reuters, 2019).Google Scholar
Oliver, P. C. The Constitution of Independence: The Development of Constitutional Theory in Australia, Canada and New Zealand (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005).Google Scholar
Oosterhuis, H. and Loughnan, A. ‘Introduction – Madness and Crime: Historical Perspectives on Forensic Psychiatry’ (2014) 37(1) International Journal of Law and Psychiatry 1–16.Google Scholar
O’Regan, R. S. New Essays on the Australian Criminal Codes (Sydney: Law Book Co., 1988).Google Scholar
O’Regan, R. S. ‘Law Reform and Politics’ (1996) 14 Australian Bar Review 1–5.Google Scholar
O’Regan, R. S. ‘Sir Samuel Griffith’s Criminal Code’ (1991) XIV(8) Royal Historical Society of Queensland Journal 305–17.Google Scholar
Pahl, R. On Friendship (Cambridge: Polity Press, 2000).Google Scholar
Paisley, F. ‘Citizens of Their World: Australian Feminism and Indigenous Rights in the International Context, 1920s and 1930s’ (1998) 58 Feminist Review 66–84.Google Scholar
Palmer, B. ‘Nineteenth-Century Canada and Australia: The Paradoxes of Class Formation’ (1996) 71 Labour History 16–36.Google Scholar
Parker, A., Sarat, A. and Umphrey, M. M.Introduction’, in Parker, A., Sarat, A. and Umphrey, M. M. (eds.), Subjects of Responsibility: Framing Personhood in Modern Bureaucracies (New York: Fordham University Press, 2011), pp. 1–18.Google Scholar
Parker, G.The Origins of the Canadian Criminal Code’, in Flaherty, D. H. (ed.), Essays in the History of Canadian Law Volume 1 (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1981), pp. 249–81.Google Scholar
Parker, R. S.Garran, Sir Robert Randolph (1867–1957)’, in Nairn, B. (ed.), Australian Dictionary of Biography Volume 8: 1891–1939 (Melbourne: Melbourne University Press, 1981).Google Scholar
Pascoe, C. ‘Be Home by Dark: Childhood Freedoms and Adult Fears in 1950s Victoria’ (2009) 40(2) Australian Historical Studies pp. 215–31.Google Scholar
Pasquino, P.Criminology: The Birth of a Special Saviour’, in Beirne, P. (ed.), The Origins and Growth of Criminology: Essays on Intellectual History, 1760–1945 (Aldershot, UK: Dartmouth Publishing, 1994), pp. 17–32.Google Scholar
Peel, M.New Worlds of Friendship: The Early Twentieth Century’, in Caine, B. (ed.), Friendship: A History (London: Equinox Publishing, 2009), pp. 279–316.Google Scholar
Peel, M., Reed, L. and Walter, J.The Importance of Friends: The Most Recent Past’, in Caine, B. (ed.), Friendship: A History (London: Equinox Publishing, 2009), pp. 317–56.Google Scholar
Peelo, M., Francis, B., Soothill, K., Pearson, J. and Ackerley, , E. ‘Newspaper Reporting and the Public Construction of Homicide’ (2004) 44 British Journal of Criminology 256–75.Google Scholar
Perkins, R. M. ‘A Re-Examination of Malice Aforethought’ (1934) 43(4) Yale Law Review 537–70.Google Scholar
Philip, R. F. B. ‘Criminal Responsibility at Common Law and under the Criminal Code – Some Comparisons’ (1948–51) 1(2) University of Queensland Law Journal 1–13.Google Scholar
Pifferi, M. ‘Criminal Responsibility and Its Histories: New Perspectives for Comparative Legal History’ (2017) 4(2) Critical Analysis of Law 222–32.Google Scholar
Pifferi, M. Reinventing Punishment: A Comparative History of Criminology and Penology in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2016).Google Scholar
Piper, A. J. ‘To Judge a Thief: How the Background of Thieves Became Central to Dispensing Justice, Western Australia, 1921–1951’ (2017) 4(1) Law & History 113–44.Google Scholar
Postema, G. J. Bentham and the Common Law Tradition (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1986).Google Scholar
Prasser, S. Royal Commissions and Public Inquiries in Australia (Sydney: LexisNexis, 2006).Google Scholar
Pratt, J. ‘Governing the Dangerous: An Historical Overview of Dangerous Offender Legislation’ (1996) 5(1) Social & Legal Studies 21–36.Google Scholar
Pringle, K. ‘R v. Robyn Bella Kina’ (1994) 3(67) Aboriginal Law Bulletin 14.Google Scholar
Quilter, J. ‘Criminalisation of Alcohol Fuelled Violence: One-Punch Laws’, in Crofts, T. and Loughnan, A. (eds.), Criminalisation and Criminal Responsibility in Australia (Sydney: Oxford University Press, 2015), pp. 82–104.Google Scholar
Quilter, J. ‘Re-framing the Rape Trial: Insights from Critical Theory about the Limitations of Legislative Reform’ (2011) 35(1) Australian Feminist Law Journal 23–56.Google Scholar
Quinlan, M.Australia, 1788–1902: A Working Man’s Paradise?’ in Hay, D. and Craven, P. (eds.), Masters, Servants, and Magistrates in Britain and the Empire, 1562–1955 (Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press, 2004), pp. 219–50.Google Scholar
Rabin, D. Identity, Crime, and Legal Responsibility in Eighteenth-Century England (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2004).Google Scholar
Ramsay, P. The Insecurity State: Vulnerable Autonomy and the Right to Security in the Criminal Law (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012).Google Scholar
Ramsay, P. ‘The Responsible Subject as Citizen: Criminal Law, Democracy and the Welfare State’ (2006) 69(1) Modern Law Review 29–58.Google Scholar
Ramsland, J. Children of the Back Lanes: Destitute and Neglected Children in Colonial New South Wales (Sydney: New South Wales University Press, 1986).Google Scholar
Ramsland, J. With Just but Relentless Discipline: A Social History of Corrective Services in New South Wales (Sydney: Kangaroo Press, 1996).Google Scholar
Re, L.Moore, Sir William Harrison (1867–1935)’, in Nairn, B. (ed.), Australian Dictionary of Biography Volume 10: 1891–1939 (Melbourne: Melbourne University Press, 1986).Google Scholar
Reynolds, H. Forgotten War (Sydney: NewSouth Books, 2013).Google Scholar
Reynolds, H. The Other Side of the Frontier: Aboriginal Resistance to the European Invasion of Australia (London: Penguin Books, 1982).Google Scholar
Richter, M.The Comparative Study of Regimes and Societies’, in Goldie, M. and Wokler, R. (eds.), Cambridge History of Eighteenth Century Political Thought (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2006), pp. 145–71.Google Scholar
Ristroph, A.Responsibility for the Criminal Law’, in Duff, R. A. and Green, S. P. (eds.), Philosophical Foundations of Criminal Law (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011), pp. 107–24.Google Scholar
Robert, H. ‘Disciplining the Female Aboriginal Body: Inter-racial Sex and the Pretence of Separation’ (2001) 16(34) Australian Feminist Studies 69–81.Google Scholar
Robinson, P. H. and Dubber, M. D. ‘The American Model Penal Code: A Brief Overview’ (2007) 10(3) New Criminal Law Review 319–41.Google Scholar
Rodensky, L. The Crime in Mind: Criminal Responsibility and the Victorian Novel (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003).Google Scholar
Rogers, N. ‘Policing the Poor in Eighteenth Century London: The Vagrancy Laws and Their Administration’ (1991) XXIV Histoire sociale/Social History 127–47.Google Scholar
Rose, A. ‘Developments in Criminal Law and Criminal Justice: 1995 Australian Criminal Code Act: Corporate Criminal Provisions’ (1995) 6(1) Criminal Law Forum 129–47.Google Scholar
Rose, N.Expertise and the Government of Conduct’, in Silbey, S. S. and Sarat, A. (eds.), Studies in Law, Politics and Society (Greenwich, CT: JAI Press, 1994), pp. 359–97.Google Scholar
Rose, N. Governing the Soul: The Shaping of the Private Self, 2nd ed. (London: Routledge, 1999).Google Scholar
Rose, N. ‘Government, Authority and Expertise in Advanced Liberalism’ (1993) 22(3) Economy and Society 283–99.Google Scholar
Rose, N. Inventing Our Selves: Psychology, Power, and Personhood (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1998).Google Scholar
Rose, N. Powers of Freedom: Reframing Political Thought (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1999).Google Scholar
Rose, N. ‘The Biology of Culpability: Pathological Identity and Crime Control in a Biological Culture’ (2000) 4(1) Theoretical Criminology 5–34.Google Scholar
Rosen, F.Utilitarianism and the Reform of the Criminal Law’, in Goldie, M. and Wokler, R. (eds.), Cambridge History of Eighteenth Century Political Thought (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2011), pp. 547–72.Google Scholar
Rowbotham, J. and Stevenson, K. ‘Societal Dystopias and Legal Utopias? Reflections on Visions Past and the Enduring Ideal of Criminal Codification’ (2000) 9(25) Nottingham Law Journal 25–38.Google Scholar
Rush, P. ‘Jurisdictions of Sexual Assault: Reforming the Texts and Testimony of Rape in Australia’ (2011) 19(1) Feminist Legal Studies 47–73.Google Scholar
Ryan, J. ‘“She Lives with a Chinaman”: Orient-ing ‘White’ Women in the Courts of Law’ (1999) 23(60) Journal of Australian Studies 149–59.Google Scholar
Salter, M.The Privatisation of Incest: The Neglect of Familial Sexual Abuse in Australian Public Inquiries’, in Smaal, Y., Kaladelfos, A. and Finnane, M. (eds.), The Sexual Abuse of Children: Recognition and Redress (Melbourne: Monash University Press, 2016), pp. 108–20.Google Scholar
Schneebaum, G. ‘Making Abuse Offences in the Modern Criminal Law’ (2017) 4(1) Critical Analysis of Law 42–52.Google Scholar
Schloenhardt, A. ‘Mafias and Motorbikes: New Organised Crime Offences in Australia’ (2007) 19 Current Issues Criminal Justice 259–82.Google Scholar
Schloenhardt, A. ‘Organised Crime and the Business of Migrant Trafficking: An Economic Analysis’ (1999) 32(3) Crime, Law and Social Change 203–33.Google Scholar
Scott, D. and Swain, S. Confronting Cruelty: Historical Perspectives on Child Protection in Australia (Melbourne: Melbourne University Press, 2002).Google Scholar
Scott, G. ‘A Model Criminal Code’ (1992) 16 Criminal Law Journal 350–2.Google Scholar
Scrine, C. ‘“More Deadly than the Male”: The Sexual Politics of Female Poisoning: Trials of the Thallium Women’ (2002) 8 Limina 127–43.Google Scholar
Scutt, J. A. ‘Judicial Bias or Legal Bias? Battery, Women and the Law’ (1995) 19(43) Journal of Australian Studies 130–43.Google Scholar
Scutt, J. A. Even in the Best of Homes: Violence in the Family (Ringwood: Penguin Australia, 1983).Google Scholar
Selchow, S.Security Policy and (Global) Risk(s)’, in Kaldor, M. and Rangelov, I. (eds.), The Handbook of Global Security Policy (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2014), pp. 68–84.Google Scholar
Shaw, A. G. L. ‘British Policy Towards the Australian Aborigines, 1830–1850’ (1992) 25(99) Australian Historical Studies 265–85.Google Scholar
Sheehy, E., Stubbs, J. and Tolmie, J. ‘Defending Battered Women on Trial: The Battered Woman Syndrome and Its Limitations’ (1992) 16(6) Criminal Law Journal 369–94.Google Scholar
Sherington, G. ‘Contrasting Narratives in the History of Twentieth-Century British Child Migration to Australia: An Interpretive Essay’ (2012) 9(2) History Australia 27–47.Google Scholar
Shircore, M., Douglas, H. and Morwood, V. ‘Domestic and Family Violence and Police Negligence’ (2017) 39 Sydney Law Review 539–67.Google Scholar
Simester, A. P. and Shute, S.On the General Part in Criminal Law’, in Shute, S. and Simester, A. P. (eds.), Criminal Law Theory: Doctrines of the General Part (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2002), pp. 1–12.Google Scholar
Skinner, Q. ‘A Genealogy of the Modern State’ (2009) 162 Proceedings of the British Academy 325–70.Google Scholar
Skuy, D. ‘Macaulay and the Indian Penal Code of 1862: The Myth of the Inherent Superiority and Modernity of the English Legal System Compared to India’s Legal System in the Nineteenth Century’ (1998) 32(3) Modern Asian Studies 513–57.Google Scholar
Smaal, Y. ‘Historical Perspectives on Child Sexual Abuse, Part 1’ (2013) 11(9) History Compass 702–14.Google Scholar
Smaal, Y. ‘Historical Perspectives on Child Sexual Abuse, Part 2’ (2013) 11(9) History Compass 715–26.Google Scholar
Smart, C. Women, Crime and Criminology: A Feminist Critique (London: Routledge, 1976).Google Scholar
Smith, K. ‘Subjectivity, Hegemony and the Subaltern in Sydney, 1870–1900’ (2007) 19(2) Rethinking Marxism 169–79.Google Scholar
Smith, K. J. M.General Principles of Criminal Law’, in Cornish, W., Anderson, J. S., Cocks, R., Lobban, M., Polden, P. and Smith, K. (eds.), The Oxford History of the Laws of England Volume XIII: 1820–1914 Fields of Development (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2010), pp. 217–320.Google Scholar
Smith, K. J. M.Macaulay’s “Utilitarian” Indian Penal Code: An Illustration of the Accidental Function of Time, Place and Personalities in Law Making’, in Gordon, W. M. and Fergus, T. D. (eds.), Legal History in the Making: Proceedings from the Ninth British Legal History Conference (London: The Hambledon Press, 1991), pp. 145–64.Google Scholar
Smith, K. J. M.The Sources and Form of the Criminal Law: The Medium of Change and Development: Consolidation or Codification?’ in Cornish, W., Anderson, J. S., Cocks, R., Lobban, M., Polden, P. and Smith, K. (eds.), The Oxford History of the Laws of England Volume XIII: 1820–1914 Fields of Development (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2010), pp. 180–216.Google Scholar
Smyth, P.The Historical Context for Action’, in McClelland, A. and Smyth, P. (eds.), Social Policy in Australia: Understanding for Action (Melbourne: Oxford University Press, 2014), pp. 81–94.Google Scholar
Steel, A. ‘Consorting in New South Wales: Substantive Offence or Police Power?’ (2003) 26(3) University of New South Wales Law Journal 567–602.Google Scholar
Stephen, J. F. A History of the Criminal Law of England Volume 2 (London: Macmillan and Co., 1883).Google Scholar
Stevens, R. B. Law School: Legal Education in America from the 1850s to the 1980s (Clark, NJ: The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd., 2001).Google Scholar
Stewart, J. G.Complicity’, in Dubber, M. D. and Hörnle, T. (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Criminal Law (New York: Oxford University Press, 2014), pp. 534–59.Google Scholar
Strange, C. ‘Masculinities, Intimate Femicide and the Death Penalty in Australia, 1890–1920’ (2003) 43(2) British Journal of Criminology 310–39.Google Scholar
Stubbs, J.Murder, Manslaughter and Domestic Violence’, in Fitz-Gibbon, K. and Walklate, S. (eds.), Homicide, Gender and Responsibility: An International Perspective (Milton Park, UK: Routledge, 2016), pp. 36–52.Google Scholar
Stubbs, J. and Tolmie, J. ‘Race, Gender and the Battered Woman Syndrome: An Australian Case Study’ (1995) 8 Canadian Journal of Women and Law 122–58.Google Scholar
Sugarman, D. ‘“A Hatred of Disorder”: Legal Science, Liberalism and Imperialism’, in Fitzpatrick, P. (ed.), Dangerous Supplements: Resistance and Renewal in Jurisprudence (London: Pluto Press, 1991), pp. 34–67.Google Scholar
Swain, S. ‘Beyond Child Migration: Inquiries, Apologies and Implications for the Writing of Transnational Child Welfare History’ (2016) 13(1) History Australia 139–52.Google Scholar
Swain, S. Born in Hope: The Early Years of the Family Court of Australia (Sydney: UNSW Press, 2012).Google Scholar
Swain, S. ‘Institutional Abuse: A Long History’ (2018) 42(2) Journal of Australian Studies 153–63.Google Scholar
Swain, S.Narratives of Innocence and Seduction’, in Smaal, Y., Kaladelfos, A. and Finnane, M. (eds.), The Sexual Abuse of Children: Recognition and Redress (Melbourne: Monash University Press, 2016).Google Scholar
Swain, S.Why Sexual Abuse? Why Now?’ in Sköld, J. and Swain, S. (eds.), Apologies and the Legacy of Abuse of Children in ‘Care’: International Perspectives (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2015), pp. 83–94.Google Scholar
Tadros, V. ‘Crimes and Security’ (2008) 71(6) Modern Law Review 940–70.Google Scholar
Tadros, V. Criminal Responsibility (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005).Google Scholar
Tarrant, S. ‘Building Bridges in Australian Criminal Law: Codification and the Common Law’ (2012) 39(3) Monash University Law Review 838–63.Google Scholar
Tarrant, S. and Blake, M. ‘Introduction to the UWA Law Review Special Issue’ (2019) 45(2) University of Western Australia Law Review (forthcoming).Google Scholar
Taylor, G. ‘Dr Pennefather’s Criminal Code for South Australia’ (2002) 31(1) Common Law World Review 62–102.Google Scholar
Taylor, G. ‘The Victorian Criminal Code’ (2004) 23 University of Queensland Law Journal 170–204.Google Scholar
Thornton, M. Privatising the Public University: The Case of Law (London: Routledge, 2012).Google Scholar
Tomsen, S. and Crofts, T. ‘Social and Cultural Meanings of Legal Responses to Homicide Among Men: Masculine Honour, Sexual Advances and Accidents’ (2012) 45(3) Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology 423–37.Google Scholar
Toole, K. ‘Defensive Homicide on Trial in Victoria’ (2013) 39(2) Monash University Law Review 473–505.Google Scholar
Torpey, J. ‘“Making Whole What Has Been Smashed”: Reflections on Reparations’ (2001) 73 The Journal of Modern History 333–58.Google Scholar
Turner, J. W. C. ‘The Mental Element in Crimes at Common Law’ (1936) 6(1) Cambridge Law Journal 31–66.Google Scholar
Twining, W.Reflections on Law in Context’, in Cane, P. and Stapleton, J. (eds.), Essays for Patrick Atiyah (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1991), pp. 1–30.Google Scholar
Ulbrick, M., Flynn, A. and Tyson, D. ‘The Abolition of Defensive Homicide: A Step Towards Populist Punitivism at the Expense of Mentally Impaired Offenders’ (2016) 40 Melbourne University Law Review 324–70.Google Scholar
Urbas, G. and Bronitt, S.Courts, Criminal Law and Procedure’, in Graycar, A. and Grabosky, P. (eds.), The Cambridge Handbook of Australian Criminology (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002), pp. 73–93.Google Scholar
Valentine, K. and Breckenridge, J. ‘Responses to Family and Domestic Violence: Supporting Women?’ (2016) 25(1) Griffith Law Review 30–44.Google Scholar
Valverde, M. ‘As If Subjects Existed: Analyzing Social Discourses’ (1991) 28(2) Canadian Review of Sociology and Anthropology 173–87.Google Scholar
van Krieken, R. Children and the State: Social Control and the Formation of Australian Child Welfare (Sydney: Allen & Unwin, 1991).Google Scholar
van Krieken, R. ‘Rethinking Cultural Genocide: Aboriginal Child Removal and Settler-Colonial State Formation’ (2004) 75(2) Oceania 125–51.Google Scholar
van Krieken, R. ‘The ‘Stolen Generations’ and Cultural Genocide: The Forced Removal of Australian Indigenous Children from Their Families and Its Implications for the Sociology of Childhood’ (1999) 6(3) Childhood 297–311.Google Scholar
Veitch, S. Law and Irresponsibility: On the Legitimation of Human Suffering (London: Routledge, 2007).Google Scholar
Vincent, N. A.A Structured Taxonomy of Responsibility Concepts’, in Vincent, N. A., van de Poel, I., and van den Hoven, J. (eds.), Moral Responsibility: Beyond Free Will and Determinism (New York: Springer, 2011), pp. 15–35.Google Scholar
Vines, P. ‘Apologising to Avoid Liability: Cynical Civility or Practical Morality?’ (2005) 27 Sydney Law Review 483–506.Google Scholar
Walker, L. The Battered Woman (New York: Harper and Row, 1979).Google Scholar
Walker, R. ‘The New South Wales Police Force, 1862–1900’ (1984) 8(15) Journal of Australian Studies 25–38.Google Scholar
Wangmann, J. ‘Liability for Institutional Child Sexual Assault: Where Does Lepore Leave Australia?’ (2004) 28 Melbourne University Law Review 169–202.Google Scholar
Ward, D.Imperial Policy, Colonial Government, and Indigenous Testimony in South Australia and New Zealand in the 1840s’, in Dorsett, S. and Hunter, I. (eds.), Law and Politics in British Colonial Thought (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2010), pp. 229–47.Google Scholar
Ward, T. ‘The Sad Subject of Infanticide: Law, Medicine and Child Murder 1860–1938’ (1999) 8(2) Social & Legal Studies 163–80.Google Scholar
Weeks, W. and Gilmore, K.How Violence Against Women Became an Issue on the National Policy Agenda’, in Dalton, T., Draper, M., Weeks, W. and Wiseman, J. (eds.), Making Social Policy in Australia (Sydney: Allen & Unwin, 1996), pp. 141–53.Google Scholar
Wells, B. ‘Criminal Codes for the Commonwealth and the States?’ (1991) 62 Reform 108–10.Google Scholar
Wells, C. Corporations and Criminal Responsibility (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2001).Google Scholar
Wells, C. ‘Swatting the Subjectivist Bug’ [1982] Criminal Law Review 209–20.Google Scholar
Wheare, K. C.Allen, Sir Carleton Kemp (1887–1966)’, in Nairn, B. (ed.), Australian Dictionary of Biography Volume 7: 1891–1939 (Melbourne: Melbourne University Press, 1979).Google Scholar
White, R.War and Australian Society’, in McKernan, M. and Brown, M. (eds.), Australia: Two Centuries of War and Peace (Canberra: Allen & Unwin, 1988), pp. 391–424.Google Scholar
White, S. ‘The Making of the New Zealand Criminal Code Act of 1893: A Sketch’ (1986) 16 Victoria University of Wellington Law Review 353–76.Google Scholar
Whitman, J. Q. ‘The Case for Penal Modernism: Beyond Utility and Desert’ (2014) 1(2) Critical Analysis of Law 143–81.Google Scholar
Whitman, J. Q.The Transition to Modernity’, in Dubber, M. D. and Hörnle, T. (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Criminal Law (New York: Oxford University Press, 2014), pp. 84–110.Google Scholar
Wiener, M. J. Reconstructing the Criminal: Culture, Law and Policy in England, 1830–1914 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1994).Google Scholar
Williams, G. Textbook of Criminal Law (London: Stevens, 1978).Google Scholar
Williams, G. Criminal Law: The General Part (London: Stevens, 1953).Google Scholar
Wills, D. ‘One Nation: Nine Codes’, The Bulletin, 16 October 1990.Google Scholar
Wilson, W. F. and Graham, A. D. (eds.), The Criminal Code of Queensland and the Criminal Practice Rules of 1900 (Brisbane: Government Printer, 1901).Google Scholar
Winterton, , G. ‘Comparative Law Teaching’ (1975) 23(1) The American Journal of Comparative Law 69–118.Google Scholar
Woods, G. D. A History of Criminal Law in New South Wales Volume 1: The Colonial Period: 1788–1900 (Sydney: Federation Press, 2002).Google Scholar
Woods, G. D. A History of Criminal Law in New South Wales Volume 2: The New State, 1901–1955 (Sydney: The Federation Press, 2018).Google Scholar
Wootton, B. Crime and the Criminal Law: Reflections of a Magistrate and Social Scientist (London: Stevens and Sons, 1963).Google Scholar
Wright, B. ‘Criminal Law Codification and Imperial Projects: The Self-Governing Jurisdiction Codes of the 1890s’ (2008) 12 Legal History 19–49.Google Scholar
Wright, B. ‘Self-Governing Codifications of English Criminal Law and Empire: The Queensland and Canadian Examples’ (2007) 26(1) University of Queensland Law Journal 39–65.Google Scholar
Wright, K. ‘Challenging Institutional Denial: Psychological Discourse, Therapeutic Culture and Public Inquiries’ (2018) 42(2) Journal of Australian Studies 177–90.Google Scholar
Wright, K. The Rise of the Therapeutic Society: Psychological Knowledge and the Contradictions of Cultural Change (Washington, DC: New Academia, 2011).Google Scholar
Wright, N. E.The Problem of Aboriginal Evidence in Early Colonial New South Wales’, in Kirkby, D. and Coleborne, C. (eds.), Law, History, Colonialism: The Reach of Empire (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2001), pp. 140–55.Google Scholar
Yeo, S. ‘Revisiting Excessive Self-Defence’ (2000) 12 Current Issues in Criminal Justice 39–57.Google Scholar
Yeo, S. ‘Revitalising the Penal Code with a General Part’ [2004] Singapore Journal of Legal Studies 1–19.Google Scholar
Yeo, S. ‘The New Developments in the Law of Self-Defence in Australia’ (1987) 7 Oxford Journal of Legal Studies 489–96.Google Scholar
Zedner, L. ‘Pre-crime and Post-criminology?’ (2007) 11(2) Theoretical Criminology 261–81.Google Scholar
Zedner, L. ‘Too Much Security?’ (2003) 31(3) International Journal of the Sociology of Law 155–84.Google Scholar
American Law Institute, Model Penal and Correctional Code: Official Draft and Explanatory Notes (adopted 24 May 1962) (Philadelphia, PA: The American Law Institute, 1985).Google Scholar
Attorney-General’s Department (Cth), Guide to Framing Commonwealth Offences, Civil Penalties and Enforcement Powers (2007).Google Scholar
Attorney-General’s Department (SA), First Interim Report to the Attorney-General of South Australia on Reform of the Criminal Law in South Australia, Consistency in Criminal Law Reform at a National Level, and Progress Toward a Model Penal Code for Australia (1991).Google Scholar
Australian Law Reform Commission, Pathways to Justice – An Inquiry into the Incarceration Rate of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples, Report No. 133 (2017).Google Scholar
Australian Law Reform Commission, Recognition of Aboriginal Customary Laws, Report No. 31 (1986).Google Scholar
Australian Law Reform Commission, Royal Commissions and Official Inquiries, Discussion Paper No. 75 (2009).Google Scholar
Australian Law Reform Commission and New South Wales Law Reform Commission, Family Violence – A National Legal Response, ALRC Final Report No. 114, NSWLRC Final Report No. 128 (2010).Google Scholar
Boxall, H., Tomison, A. and Hulme, S. Historical Review of Sexual Offence and Child Sexual Abuse Legislation in Australia: 1788–2013, Report prepared by the Australian Institute of Criminology for the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse (2014).Google Scholar
Cashmore, J., Taylor, A., Shackel, R. and Parkinson, P. The Impact of Delayed Reporting on the Prosecution and Outcomes of Child Sexual Abuse Cases, Report for the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse (2016).Google Scholar
Cockburn, Lord Chief Justice, Letter containing comments and suggestions in relation to the Criminal Code (Indictable Offences) Bill, 12 June 1879, H.C. Papers, 1878–79, vol. 59.Google Scholar
Cockburn, Lord Chief Justice, Letter to the Attorney General on the Criminal Code, 7 February 1880 (1880) 22 Law Journal 184–8, 202–8.Google Scholar
Committee of Enquiry into Child Care Services in Victoria, Parliament of Victoria, Report (1976).Google Scholar
Committee of Investigation into Allegations of Neglect and Maltreatment of Young Children (Vic), Report to the Honourable the Chief Secretary and the Honourable to Minister of Health (1967).Google Scholar
Committee of Investigation into Allegations of Neglect and Maltreatment of Young Children, Second Report to the Honourable the Chief Secretary and the Honourable to Minister of Health (1969).Google Scholar
Commonwealth of Australia, Australian Royal Commission of Inquiry into Drugs, Report (1980).Google Scholar
Commonwealth of Australia, Department of Justice, Introduction of Criminal Code Bill Is Legal History in the Making Says Minister for Justice, Press Release (1 July 1994).Google Scholar
Commonwealth of Australia, New South Wales, Victoria and Queensland, Royal Commission of Inquiry into Drug Trafficking (1981–1983).Google Scholar
Commonwealth of Australia, Office of the Prime Minister (Gough Whitlam), Royal Commission into Human Relationships, Press Statement No. 306 (Canberra, 21 August 1974).Google Scholar
Commonwealth of Australia, Office of the Prime Minister (Malcolm Turnbull), Press Conference with the Attorney General and the Minister for Social Services (13 June 2018).Google Scholar
Commonwealth of Australia, Parliament of Australia, The Aboriginals and Half-Castes of Central Australia and North Australia (1928).Google Scholar
Commonwealth of Australia, Parliament of Australia, Explanatory Memorandum, Criminal Code Bill 1994 (Cth).Google Scholar
Commonwealth of Australia, Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody, Final Report (1991).Google Scholar
Commonwealth of Australia, Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, Consultation Paper: Criminal Justice (2016).Google Scholar
Commonwealth of Australia, Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, Final Report (2017).Google Scholar
Commonwealth of Australia, Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, Interim Report (2014).Google Scholar
Commonwealth of Australia, Royal Commission on Human Relationships, Final Report (1977).Google Scholar
Commonwealth of Australia, The Northern Territory Report for the Period 1st July, 1953, to 30th June, 1955 (1956).Google Scholar
Criminal Law and Penal Methods Reform Committee of South Australia, Special Report: Rape and Other Sexual Offences (1976).Google Scholar
Criminal Law Officers’ Committee, Standing Committee of Attorneys-General, Model Criminal Code Chapters 1 and 2: General Principles of Criminal Responsibility, Final Report (1992).Google Scholar
Criminal Law Officers’ Committee, Standing Committee of Attorneys-General, Model Criminal Code Chapter 2: General Principles of Criminal Responsibility, Discussion Draft (1992).Google Scholar
Department of Community Welfare (WA), The Battered Child: Proceedings of the First National Australian Conference, Mt. Lawley Teachers College, Perth, August 25–28 (1975).Google Scholar
Easterbrook, M. ‘Moves Begin Toward National Criminal Code’, The Age, 9 September 1993.Google Scholar
Editorial, ‘Consent Laws Barriers to Reform’, The Australian, 21 December 1996.Google Scholar
Editorial, ‘Consent Question Should Be Faced’, The Australian, 17 December 1996.Google Scholar
Family and Community Development Committee, Parliament of Victoria, Betrayal of Trust: Inquiry into the Handling of Child Abuse by Religious and Other Non-Government Organisations, Final Report (2013).Google Scholar
Family Law Council, Parliament of Australia, Child Sexual Abuse Report (1988).Google Scholar
Freiberg, A., Donnelly, H. and Gelb, K. Sentencing for Child Sexual Abuse in Institutional Contexts, Report for the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse (2015).Google Scholar
Gleeson, M. ‘The Privy Council: An Australian Perspective’ (Address delivered at the Anglo-Australasian Lawyers Society, The Commercial Bar Association and Chancery Association, 18 June 2008).Google Scholar
Government of South Australia, Submission No. 13 to the Parliamentary Joint Committee on the Australian Crime Commission, Inquiry into the Legislative Arrangements to Outlaw Serious and Organized Crime Groups (2009).Google Scholar
Griffith, S. W. Digest of the Statutory Criminal Law in Force in Queensland on the first day of January, 1896 (which it is within the competence of the Parliament of Queensland to Repeal or Amend) (Brisbane: Government Printer, 1896).Google Scholar
Griffith, S. W. ‘Introductory Letter’, 29 October 1897, xi, vii.Google Scholar
Griffith, S. W. Letter to the Queensland Attorney-General, 1 June 1896 (Brisbane: Government Printer, 1896), iii–viii.Google Scholar
Griffith, S. W. Letter to the Queensland Attorney-General, 29 October 1897 (Brisbane: Government Printer, 1897), iii–xiv.Google Scholar
Herron, J. (Minister for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Affairs), Bringing Them Home: Commonwealth Initiatives (Media Release), 16 December 1997.Google Scholar
Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission, Bringing Them Home: Report of the National Inquiry into the Separation of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Children from Their Families (1997).Google Scholar
Judicial Commission of New South Wales, Partial Defences to Murder in NSW 1990–2004 (2006).Google Scholar
Justice and Community Safety Directorate (ACT), Discussion Paper: Consorting Laws for the ACT (2016).Google Scholar
Law Commission for England and Wales, Criminal Law: A Criminal Code for England and Wales Volumes 1 and 2, Law Com. No. 177 (1989).Google Scholar
Law Commission for England and Wales, Criminal Law: Codification of the Criminal Law, Law Com. No. 143 (1985).Google Scholar
Law Commission for England and Wales, Criminal Liability in Regulatory Contexts: A Consultation Paper, Consultation Paper No. 195 (2010).Google Scholar
Law Commission for England and Wales, Partial Defences to Murder, Consultation Paper No. 173 (2003).Google Scholar
Law Commission for England and Wales, Partial Defences to Murder: Final Report, Law Com. No. 290 (2004).Google Scholar
Law Reform Commission, Child Welfare, Report No. 18 (1981) (Australia).Google Scholar
Law Reform Commission, Evidence Law Reform Stage 2, Discussion Paper No. 23 (1985) (Australia).Google Scholar
Law Reform Commission of Canada, Recodifying Criminal Law, Report No. 31 (1987).Google Scholar
Law Reform Commission of Western Australia, A Review of the Law of Homicide: Final Report, Project No. 97 (2007).Google Scholar
Law Reform Commission of Western Australia, Report on the Police Offences Act, Project No. 85 (1992).Google Scholar
Legislative Council Select Committee on the Partial Defence of Provocation, Parliament of New South Wales, The Partial Defence of Provocation (2013).Google Scholar
Mathews, B. Mandatory Reporting Laws for Child Sexual Abuse in Australia: A Legislative History, Report for the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse (2014).Google Scholar
Model Criminal Code Officers’ Committee, Standing Committee of Attorneys-General, Discussion Paper (1998).Google Scholar
Model Criminal Code Officers’ Committee, Standing Committee of Attorneys-General, Report on Blackmail, Forgery and Bribery; Non-fatal Offences against the Person (1994).Google Scholar
Model Criminal Code Officers’ Committee, Standing Committee of Attorneys-General, Report on Conspiracy to Defraud (1997).Google Scholar
Model Criminal Code Officers’ Committee, Standing Committee of Attorneys-General, Report on Offences against the Administration of Justice (1998).Google Scholar
Model Criminal Code Officers’ Committee, Standing Committee of Attorneys-General, Report on Public Order Offences (1998).Google Scholar
Model Criminal Code Officers’ Committee, Standing Committee of Attorneys-General, Report on Serious Drug Offences (1998).Google Scholar
Model Criminal Code Officers’ Committee, Standing Committee of Attorneys-General, Report on Sexual Offences (1996).Google Scholar
Model Criminal Code Officers’ Committee, Standing Committee of Attorneys-General, Report on Theft, Fraud and Related Offences (1995).Google Scholar
New South Wales, Royal Commission into the New South Wales Police Service Final Report (1995–97).Google Scholar
New South Wales Department of Youth, Ethic and Community Affairs, Child Welfare Legislation Review Committee, Report (1975).Google Scholar
New South Wales Law Reform Commission, Partial Defences to Murder: Diminished Responsibility, Report No. 82 (1997).Google Scholar
New South Wales Law Reform Commission, People with Cognitive and Mental Health Impairments in the Criminal Justice System: Criminal Responsibility and Consequences, Report No. 138 (2013).Google Scholar
New South Wales Law Reform Commission, People with Cognitive and Mental Health Impairments in the Criminal Justice System: Diversion, Report No. 135 (2012).Google Scholar
New South Wales Ombudsman, The Consorting Law: Report of the Operation of Part 3A, Division 7 of the Crimes Act 1900 (2016).Google Scholar
New South Wales Task Force on Domestic Violence, New South Wales Premier’s Department, Report of New South Wales Task Force on Domestic Violence to Honourable N.K. Wran Q.C., M.P. Premier of New South Wales (1981).Google Scholar
New Zealand Law Commission, Some Criminal Defences with Particular Reference to Battered Defendants, Report No. 73 (2001).Google Scholar
Northern Territory Board of Inquiry into the Protection of Aboriginal Children from Sexual Abuse (NT), Ampe Akelyernemane Meke Mekarle ‘Little Children Are Sacred’, Report (2007).Google Scholar
Parliament of New South Wales, Children in Need: An Account of the Administration and Functions of the Child Welfare Department, New South Wales, Australia, with an Examination of the Principles Involved in Helping Deprived and Wayward Children (1956).Google Scholar
Parliament of New South Wales, Report of the Public Service Board into the Working of the State Children Relief Branch Particularly with Reference to the Conditions under Which Children Are Boarded Out (1917).Google Scholar
Parliament of Queensland, Report and Recommendations of the Commission of Inquiry into the Nature and Extent of the Problems Confronting Youth in Queensland (1975).Google Scholar
Parliament of South Australia, Children in State Care Commission of Inquiry: Allegations of Sexual Abuse and Death from Criminal Conduct (2008).Google Scholar
Parliamentary Joint Committee on the Australian Crime Commission, Parliament of Australia, Inquiry into the Future Impact of Serious and Organised Crime on Australian Society (2007).Google Scholar
Parliamentary Joint Committee on the Australian Crime Commission, Parliament of Australia, Inquiry into the Legislative Arrangements to Outlaw Serious and Organized Crime Groups (2009).Google Scholar
Queensland, Commission of Inquiry into Abuse of Children in Queensland Institutions, Report (1999).Google Scholar
Queensland, Commission of Inquiry into Possible Illegal Activities and Associated Police Misconduct (1987–89).Google Scholar
Queensland Law Reform Commission, A Review of the Excuse of Accident and the Defence of Provocation, Report No. 64 (2008).Google Scholar
Queensland Taskforce on Organised Crime Legislation, Queensland Department of Justice and Attorney-General, Final Report (2016).Google Scholar
Review of Commonwealth Criminal Law (Australia), Final Report (1991).Google Scholar
Review of Commonwealth Criminal Law (Australia), Interim Report [i.e. third]: Principles of Criminal Responsibility and Other Matters (1990).Google Scholar
Select Committee on Health, United Kingdom House of Commons, The Welfare of Former British Child Migrants, Third Report (1998).Google Scholar
Senate Community Affairs References Committee, Parliament of Australia, Australian Government Response to Forgotten Australians (2005).Google Scholar
Senate Community Affairs References Committee, Parliament of Australia, Forgotten Australians: A Report on Australians Who Experienced Institutional or Out-of-Home Care as Children (2004).Google Scholar
Senate Community Affairs References Committee, Parliament of Australia, Lost Innocents and Forgotten Australians Revisited: Report on the Progress with the Implementation of the Recommendations of the Lost Innocents and Forgotten Australians Reports (2009).Google Scholar
Senate Community Affairs References Committee, Parliament of Australia, Lost Innocents Righting the Record – Report on Child Migration (2001).Google Scholar
Senate Community Affairs References Committee, Parliament of Australia, Protecting Vulnerable Children: A National Challenge (2005).Google Scholar
Senate Standing Committee on Social Welfare, Parliament of Australia, Children in Institutional and Other Forms of Care: A National Perspective (1985).Google Scholar
Sentencing Advisory Council, Attorney-General’s Department (SA), A Discussion Paper Considering the Operation of Part 8A of the Criminal Law Consolidation Act 1935 (SA) (2013).Google Scholar
South Australia, Children in State Care Commission of Inquiry, Children in State Care Commission of Inquiry: Allegations of Sexual Abuse and Death from Criminal Conduct (2008).Google Scholar
South Australia, Royal Commission on the Aborigines, Progress Report (1913).Google Scholar
Standing Committee of Attorneys-General, Communiqué (2009).Google Scholar
Swain, S. History of Australian Inquiries Reviewing Institutions Providing Care for Children, Report for the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse (2014).Google Scholar
Sydney Morning Herald, ‘In Parliament’, 7 September 1900.Google Scholar
Victoria, Juvenile Delinquency Advisory Committee, Report (1956).Google Scholar
Victoria, Royal Commission into Family Violence, Report and Recommendations (2016).Google Scholar
Victoria, Royal Commission into Family Violence, Summary and Recommendations (2016).Google Scholar
Victorian Government, Victorian Government Response to the Report of the Family and Community Development Committee Inquiry into the Handling of Child Abuse by Religious and Other Non-government Organisations ‘Betrayal of Trust’ (2014).Google Scholar
Victorian Law Reform Commission, Defences to Homicide: Final Report, Report No. 94 (2004).Google Scholar
Western Australia, Royal Commission Appointed to Investigate, Report and Advise Upon Matters in Relation to the Condition and Treatment of Aborigines, Report (1935).Google Scholar
Western Australia, Royal Commission on State Children and Charities Department, Report (1921).Google Scholar
Willox, I. ‘Keating Strives for National Law Reform’, The Age, 22 September 1994.Google Scholar
American Law Institute, Model Penal and Correctional Code: Official Draft and Explanatory Notes (adopted 24 May 1962) (Philadelphia, PA: The American Law Institute, 1985).Google Scholar
Attorney-General’s Department (Cth), Guide to Framing Commonwealth Offences, Civil Penalties and Enforcement Powers (2007).Google Scholar
Attorney-General’s Department (SA), First Interim Report to the Attorney-General of South Australia on Reform of the Criminal Law in South Australia, Consistency in Criminal Law Reform at a National Level, and Progress Toward a Model Penal Code for Australia (1991).Google Scholar
Australian Law Reform Commission, Pathways to Justice – An Inquiry into the Incarceration Rate of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples, Report No. 133 (2017).Google Scholar
Australian Law Reform Commission, Recognition of Aboriginal Customary Laws, Report No. 31 (1986).Google Scholar
Australian Law Reform Commission, Royal Commissions and Official Inquiries, Discussion Paper No. 75 (2009).Google Scholar
Australian Law Reform Commission and New South Wales Law Reform Commission, Family Violence – A National Legal Response, ALRC Final Report No. 114, NSWLRC Final Report No. 128 (2010).Google Scholar
Boxall, H., Tomison, A. and Hulme, S. Historical Review of Sexual Offence and Child Sexual Abuse Legislation in Australia: 1788–2013, Report prepared by the Australian Institute of Criminology for the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse (2014).Google Scholar
Cashmore, J., Taylor, A., Shackel, R. and Parkinson, P. The Impact of Delayed Reporting on the Prosecution and Outcomes of Child Sexual Abuse Cases, Report for the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse (2016).Google Scholar
Cockburn, Lord Chief Justice, Letter containing comments and suggestions in relation to the Criminal Code (Indictable Offences) Bill, 12 June 1879, H.C. Papers, 1878–79, vol. 59.Google Scholar
Cockburn, Lord Chief Justice, Letter to the Attorney General on the Criminal Code, 7 February 1880 (1880) 22 Law Journal 184–8, 202–8.Google Scholar
Committee of Enquiry into Child Care Services in Victoria, Parliament of Victoria, Report (1976).Google Scholar
Committee of Investigation into Allegations of Neglect and Maltreatment of Young Children (Vic), Report to the Honourable the Chief Secretary and the Honourable to Minister of Health (1967).Google Scholar
Committee of Investigation into Allegations of Neglect and Maltreatment of Young Children, Second Report to the Honourable the Chief Secretary and the Honourable to Minister of Health (1969).Google Scholar
Commonwealth of Australia, Australian Royal Commission of Inquiry into Drugs, Report (1980).Google Scholar
Commonwealth of Australia, Department of Justice, Introduction of Criminal Code Bill Is Legal History in the Making Says Minister for Justice, Press Release (1 July 1994).Google Scholar
Commonwealth of Australia, New South Wales, Victoria and Queensland, Royal Commission of Inquiry into Drug Trafficking (1981–1983).Google Scholar
Commonwealth of Australia, Office of the Prime Minister (Gough Whitlam), Royal Commission into Human Relationships, Press Statement No. 306 (Canberra, 21 August 1974).Google Scholar
Commonwealth of Australia, Office of the Prime Minister (Malcolm Turnbull), Press Conference with the Attorney General and the Minister for Social Services (13 June 2018).Google Scholar
Commonwealth of Australia, Parliament of Australia, The Aboriginals and Half-Castes of Central Australia and North Australia (1928).Google Scholar
Commonwealth of Australia, Parliament of Australia, Explanatory Memorandum, Criminal Code Bill 1994 (Cth).Google Scholar
Commonwealth of Australia, Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody, Final Report (1991).Google Scholar
Commonwealth of Australia, Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, Consultation Paper: Criminal Justice (2016).Google Scholar
Commonwealth of Australia, Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, Final Report (2017).Google Scholar
Commonwealth of Australia, Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, Interim Report (2014).Google Scholar
Commonwealth of Australia, Royal Commission on Human Relationships, Final Report (1977).Google Scholar
Commonwealth of Australia, The Northern Territory Report for the Period 1st July, 1953, to 30th June, 1955 (1956).Google Scholar
Criminal Law and Penal Methods Reform Committee of South Australia, Special Report: Rape and Other Sexual Offences (1976).Google Scholar
Criminal Law Officers’ Committee, Standing Committee of Attorneys-General, Model Criminal Code Chapters 1 and 2: General Principles of Criminal Responsibility, Final Report (1992).Google Scholar
Criminal Law Officers’ Committee, Standing Committee of Attorneys-General, Model Criminal Code Chapter 2: General Principles of Criminal Responsibility, Discussion Draft (1992).Google Scholar
Department of Community Welfare (WA), The Battered Child: Proceedings of the First National Australian Conference, Mt. Lawley Teachers College, Perth, August 25–28 (1975).Google Scholar
Easterbrook, M. ‘Moves Begin Toward National Criminal Code’, The Age, 9 September 1993.Google Scholar
Editorial, ‘Consent Laws Barriers to Reform’, The Australian, 21 December 1996.Google Scholar
Editorial, ‘Consent Question Should Be Faced’, The Australian, 17 December 1996.Google Scholar
Family and Community Development Committee, Parliament of Victoria, Betrayal of Trust: Inquiry into the Handling of Child Abuse by Religious and Other Non-Government Organisations, Final Report (2013).Google Scholar
Family Law Council, Parliament of Australia, Child Sexual Abuse Report (1988).Google Scholar
Freiberg, A., Donnelly, H. and Gelb, K. Sentencing for Child Sexual Abuse in Institutional Contexts, Report for the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse (2015).Google Scholar
Gleeson, M. ‘The Privy Council: An Australian Perspective’ (Address delivered at the Anglo-Australasian Lawyers Society, The Commercial Bar Association and Chancery Association, 18 June 2008).Google Scholar
Government of South Australia, Submission No. 13 to the Parliamentary Joint Committee on the Australian Crime Commission, Inquiry into the Legislative Arrangements to Outlaw Serious and Organized Crime Groups (2009).Google Scholar
Griffith, S. W. Digest of the Statutory Criminal Law in Force in Queensland on the first day of January, 1896 (which it is within the competence of the Parliament of Queensland to Repeal or Amend) (Brisbane: Government Printer, 1896).Google Scholar
Griffith, S. W. ‘Introductory Letter’, 29 October 1897, xi, vii.Google Scholar
Griffith, S. W. Letter to the Queensland Attorney-General, 1 June 1896 (Brisbane: Government Printer, 1896), iii–viii.Google Scholar
Griffith, S. W. Letter to the Queensland Attorney-General, 29 October 1897 (Brisbane: Government Printer, 1897), iii–xiv.Google Scholar
Herron, J. (Minister for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Affairs), Bringing Them Home: Commonwealth Initiatives (Media Release), 16 December 1997.Google Scholar
Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission, Bringing Them Home: Report of the National Inquiry into the Separation of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Children from Their Families (1997).Google Scholar
Judicial Commission of New South Wales, Partial Defences to Murder in NSW 1990–2004 (2006).Google Scholar
Justice and Community Safety Directorate (ACT), Discussion Paper: Consorting Laws for the ACT (2016).Google Scholar
Law Commission for England and Wales, Criminal Law: A Criminal Code for England and Wales Volumes 1 and 2, Law Com. No. 177 (1989).Google Scholar
Law Commission for England and Wales, Criminal Law: Codification of the Criminal Law, Law Com. No. 143 (1985).Google Scholar
Law Commission for England and Wales, Criminal Liability in Regulatory Contexts: A Consultation Paper, Consultation Paper No. 195 (2010).Google Scholar
Law Commission for England and Wales, Partial Defences to Murder, Consultation Paper No. 173 (2003).Google Scholar
Law Commission for England and Wales, Partial Defences to Murder: Final Report, Law Com. No. 290 (2004).Google Scholar
Law Reform Commission, Child Welfare, Report No. 18 (1981) (Australia).Google Scholar
Law Reform Commission, Evidence Law Reform Stage 2, Discussion Paper No. 23 (1985) (Australia).Google Scholar
Law Reform Commission of Canada, Recodifying Criminal Law, Report No. 31 (1987).Google Scholar
Law Reform Commission of Western Australia, A Review of the Law of Homicide: Final Report, Project No. 97 (2007).Google Scholar
Law Reform Commission of Western Australia, Report on the Police Offences Act, Project No. 85 (1992).Google Scholar
Legislative Council Select Committee on the Partial Defence of Provocation, Parliament of New South Wales, The Partial Defence of Provocation (2013).Google Scholar
Mathews, B. Mandatory Reporting Laws for Child Sexual Abuse in Australia: A Legislative History, Report for the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse (2014).Google Scholar
Model Criminal Code Officers’ Committee, Standing Committee of Attorneys-General, Discussion Paper (1998).Google Scholar
Model Criminal Code Officers’ Committee, Standing Committee of Attorneys-General, Report on Blackmail, Forgery and Bribery; Non-fatal Offences against the Person (1994).Google Scholar
Model Criminal Code Officers’ Committee, Standing Committee of Attorneys-General, Report on Conspiracy to Defraud (1997).Google Scholar
Model Criminal Code Officers’ Committee, Standing Committee of Attorneys-General, Report on Offences against the Administration of Justice (1998).Google Scholar
Model Criminal Code Officers’ Committee, Standing Committee of Attorneys-General, Report on Public Order Offences (1998).Google Scholar
Model Criminal Code Officers’ Committee, Standing Committee of Attorneys-General, Report on Serious Drug Offences (1998).Google Scholar
Model Criminal Code Officers’ Committee, Standing Committee of Attorneys-General, Report on Sexual Offences (1996).Google Scholar
Model Criminal Code Officers’ Committee, Standing Committee of Attorneys-General, Report on Theft, Fraud and Related Offences (1995).Google Scholar
New South Wales, Royal Commission into the New South Wales Police Service Final Report (1995–97).Google Scholar
New South Wales Department of Youth, Ethic and Community Affairs, Child Welfare Legislation Review Committee, Report (1975).Google Scholar
New South Wales Law Reform Commission, Partial Defences to Murder: Diminished Responsibility, Report No. 82 (1997).Google Scholar
New South Wales Law Reform Commission, People with Cognitive and Mental Health Impairments in the Criminal Justice System: Criminal Responsibility and Consequences, Report No. 138 (2013).Google Scholar
New South Wales Law Reform Commission, People with Cognitive and Mental Health Impairments in the Criminal Justice System: Diversion, Report No. 135 (2012).Google Scholar
New South Wales Ombudsman, The Consorting Law: Report of the Operation of Part 3A, Division 7 of the Crimes Act 1900 (2016).Google Scholar
New South Wales Task Force on Domestic Violence, New South Wales Premier’s Department, Report of New South Wales Task Force on Domestic Violence to Honourable N.K. Wran Q.C., M.P. Premier of New South Wales (1981).Google Scholar
New Zealand Law Commission, Some Criminal Defences with Particular Reference to Battered Defendants, Report No. 73 (2001).Google Scholar
Northern Territory Board of Inquiry into the Protection of Aboriginal Children from Sexual Abuse (NT), Ampe Akelyernemane Meke Mekarle ‘Little Children Are Sacred’, Report (2007).Google Scholar
Parliament of New South Wales, Children in Need: An Account of the Administration and Functions of the Child Welfare Department, New South Wales, Australia, with an Examination of the Principles Involved in Helping Deprived and Wayward Children (1956).Google Scholar
Parliament of New South Wales, Report of the Public Service Board into the Working of the State Children Relief Branch Particularly with Reference to the Conditions under Which Children Are Boarded Out (1917).Google Scholar
Parliament of Queensland, Report and Recommendations of the Commission of Inquiry into the Nature and Extent of the Problems Confronting Youth in Queensland (1975).Google Scholar
Parliament of South Australia, Children in State Care Commission of Inquiry: Allegations of Sexual Abuse and Death from Criminal Conduct (2008).Google Scholar
Parliamentary Joint Committee on the Australian Crime Commission, Parliament of Australia, Inquiry into the Future Impact of Serious and Organised Crime on Australian Society (2007).Google Scholar
Parliamentary Joint Committee on the Australian Crime Commission, Parliament of Australia, Inquiry into the Legislative Arrangements to Outlaw Serious and Organized Crime Groups (2009).Google Scholar
Queensland, Commission of Inquiry into Abuse of Children in Queensland Institutions, Report (1999).Google Scholar
Queensland, Commission of Inquiry into Possible Illegal Activities and Associated Police Misconduct (1987–89).Google Scholar
Queensland Law Reform Commission, A Review of the Excuse of Accident and the Defence of Provocation, Report No. 64 (2008).Google Scholar
Queensland Taskforce on Organised Crime Legislation, Queensland Department of Justice and Attorney-General, Final Report (2016).Google Scholar
Review of Commonwealth Criminal Law (Australia), Final Report (1991).Google Scholar
Review of Commonwealth Criminal Law (Australia), Interim Report [i.e. third]: Principles of Criminal Responsibility and Other Matters (1990).Google Scholar
Select Committee on Health, United Kingdom House of Commons, The Welfare of Former British Child Migrants, Third Report (1998).Google Scholar
Senate Community Affairs References Committee, Parliament of Australia, Australian Government Response to Forgotten Australians (2005).Google Scholar
Senate Community Affairs References Committee, Parliament of Australia, Forgotten Australians: A Report on Australians Who Experienced Institutional or Out-of-Home Care as Children (2004).Google Scholar
Senate Community Affairs References Committee, Parliament of Australia, Lost Innocents and Forgotten Australians Revisited: Report on the Progress with the Implementation of the Recommendations of the Lost Innocents and Forgotten Australians Reports (2009).Google Scholar
Senate Community Affairs References Committee, Parliament of Australia, Lost Innocents Righting the Record – Report on Child Migration (2001).Google Scholar
Senate Community Affairs References Committee, Parliament of Australia, Protecting Vulnerable Children: A National Challenge (2005).Google Scholar
Senate Standing Committee on Social Welfare, Parliament of Australia, Children in Institutional and Other Forms of Care: A National Perspective (1985).Google Scholar
Sentencing Advisory Council, Attorney-General’s Department (SA), A Discussion Paper Considering the Operation of Part 8A of the Criminal Law Consolidation Act 1935 (SA) (2013).Google Scholar
South Australia, Children in State Care Commission of Inquiry, Children in State Care Commission of Inquiry: Allegations of Sexual Abuse and Death from Criminal Conduct (2008).Google Scholar
South Australia, Royal Commission on the Aborigines, Progress Report (1913).Google Scholar
Standing Committee of Attorneys-General, Communiqué (2009).Google Scholar
Swain, S. History of Australian Inquiries Reviewing Institutions Providing Care for Children, Report for the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse (2014).Google Scholar
Sydney Morning Herald, ‘In Parliament’, 7 September 1900.Google Scholar
Victoria, Juvenile Delinquency Advisory Committee, Report (1956).Google Scholar
Victoria, Royal Commission into Family Violence, Report and Recommendations (2016).Google Scholar
Victoria, Royal Commission into Family Violence, Summary and Recommendations (2016).Google Scholar
Victorian Government, Victorian Government Response to the Report of the Family and Community Development Committee Inquiry into the Handling of Child Abuse by Religious and Other Non-government Organisations ‘Betrayal of Trust’ (2014).Google Scholar
Victorian Law Reform Commission, Defences to Homicide: Final Report, Report No. 94 (2004).Google Scholar
Western Australia, Royal Commission Appointed to Investigate, Report and Advise Upon Matters in Relation to the Condition and Treatment of Aborigines, Report (1935).Google Scholar
Western Australia, Royal Commission on State Children and Charities Department, Report (1921).Google Scholar
Willox, I. ‘Keating Strives for National Law Reform’, The Age, 22 September 1994.Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure [email protected] is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

  • Bibliography
  • Arlie Loughnan, University of Sydney
  • Book: Self, Others and the State
  • Online publication: 11 November 2019
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108596367.011
Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

  • Bibliography
  • Arlie Loughnan, University of Sydney
  • Book: Self, Others and the State
  • Online publication: 11 November 2019
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108596367.011
Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

  • Bibliography
  • Arlie Loughnan, University of Sydney
  • Book: Self, Others and the State
  • Online publication: 11 November 2019
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108596367.011
Available formats
×