The University of Queensland Law Journal Volume 33, No. 1
Volume 33, No. 1 is a Special Issue with the theme of "After Williams".
Articles
- Anne Twomey, Post-Williams Expenditure-When Can the Commonwealth and States Spend Public Money without Parliamentary Authorisation?
 - Rex Tauati Ahdar, A Real Threat or a Mere Shadow? School Chaplaincy Programs and the Secular State
 - Daniel Stewart, Statutory Authority to Contract and the Role of Judicial Review
 - Suri Ratnapala, Fiscal Federalism In Australia: Will Williams v Commonwealth Be A Pyrrhic Victory?
 - Shipra Chordia and Andrew Lynch, Federalism in Australian Constitutional Interpretation: Signs of Reinvigoration
 - Reid Mortensen, The Establishment Clause: A Search for Meaning
 - Peter CJ James and David Benson, School Chaplaincy, Secularism and Church-State Separation in a Liberal Democracy
 - Nicholas Aroney, Freedom of Religion as an Associational Right
 - Jeremy Patrick, Religion, Secularism, and the National School Chaplaincy and Student Welfare Program
 - Jonathan Crowe and Peta Stephenson, Reimagining Fiscal Federalism: Section 96 as a Transitional Provision
 - Andrew Hemming, Williams v Commonwealth: Much Ado About Nothing
 
UQLJ
    
    Updated:  
  
  9 April 2019 3:56pm