UniSQ Logo
The current and official versions of the course specifications are available on the web at https://www.usq.edu.au/course/specification/current.
Please consult the web for updates that may occur during the year.

LAW8716 Government Accountability

Units : 1
School or Department : School of Law and Justice
Grading basis : Graded
Course fee schedule : https://www.unisq.edu.au/current-students/administration/fees/fee-schedules
Version produced : 25 July 2023

Requisites

Pre-requisite: LAW5221 or Students must be enrolled in one of the following Programs: LLBH or LLMC

Overview

Administrative law is a large and dynamic field of law relating to the supervision and correction of executive government action. It is an important modern application of the ‘rule of law’. This course, ‘Government Accountability’, builds on earlier administrative law study (that focused on core principles and citizen-driven accountability) to build a broader understanding of the more sophisticated and specialised executive accountability mechanisms, the operation of administrative law at the peripheries of conventional governmental activity, and the overall trajectory of relevant evolutions in Australian law. It also seeks to develop students with advanced understanding of key contemporary issues in the field. This content will be particularly useful for students intending to work in or for government, or in any highly regulated field. Students will further develop advanced communication and research skills through various items of assessment.

Government Accountability is available in the Master of Laws, Juris Doctor and Bachelor of Laws (Honours) programs. It explores at an advanced level the evolution of key principles and frameworks in Australian administrative law, and the problematic and now fading `public/private divide'. It examines the drivers, structures and core operations of the bourgeoning `integrity sector' in Australia - which includes auditors-general, anti-corruption bodies, public sector commissioners, freedom of information commissioners and ombudsman offices. The course also focusses in on select contemporary pressure points in current law and policy, and the broader patterns and trajectories that these reflect. It is delivered in four extended seminars (two seminars in each of two weeks), and will involve supervised research tasks and assignments.

Course offers

Study period Mode Campus
Interim Trimester 3, 2023 Online
Date printed 25 July 2023