This unit of study is designed to introduce students to Australian public law: the body of legal principles that constitute and regulate public power. It examines the functions and powers of the three branches of the Australian government — Parliament, the executive, and the courts — and the relationships between them, including the way courts interpret legislation. This unit is intended to complement students’ further studies in Constitutional Law and Administrative Law.
Unit details and rules
| Academic unit | Law |
|---|---|
| Credit points | 6 |
| Prerequisites
?
|
LAWS1006 or LAWS1025 |
| Corequisites
?
|
None |
|
Prohibitions
?
|
LAWS5007 |
| Assumed knowledge
?
|
None |
| Available to study abroad and exchange students | Yes |
Teaching staff
| Coordinator | Emily Hammond, emily.hammond@sydney.edu.au |
|---|---|
| Lecturer(s) | Rayner Thwaites, rayner.thwaites@sydney.edu.au |
| Elisa Arcioni, elisa.arcioni@sydney.edu.au | |
| Peter Chiam, peter.chiam@sydney.edu.au | |
| Grant Hooper, grant.hooper@sydney.edu.au | |
| Joel Harrison, joel.harrison@sydney.edu.au | |
| Lukas Opacic, lukas.opacic@sydney.edu.au | |
| Lynsey Blayden, lynsey.blayden@sydney.edu.au | |
| Ayesha Wijayalath, ayesha.wijayalath@sydney.edu.au |