This course critically examines international and regional laws (treaties and case-law), and domestic laws (legislation and case-law) and politics, relating to forced migration. Study will focus on contemporary refugee law and practice in Australia with a focus on international refugee law, international human rights law and the transplantation of those norms into domestic law via the Migration Act 1958 (Cth) (and selected key cases interpreting and applying those laws).

Seminars will be student-centred and inquiry-based, with limited time allocated to teacher transmission of material in each class. Students will be expected to demonstrate a thorough understanding of each topic revealed through familiarity and critical awareness of relevant primary and secondary sources, including official government publications and academic literature.

The course will provide students with an opportunity to undertake an extended piece of (inter-disciplinary) research on a socio-legal topic/problem related to those areas of study introduced and examined in the course, promoting advanced research and communication skills.

Students will critically examine how Australia has responded to the socio-politico-legal challenges of forced migration (refugee protection seekers) in the Asia-Pacific region from the last 1980s to date, with a particular emphasis on the topics listed below.

Topics covered include:

  • Who is a Refugee? 1.International Law’s Construction of a Refugee and Transplantation in Australian Domestic Law
  • Who is a Refugee? 2. Refugee Status under the Migration Act 1958: Divorcing Domestic Law from International Law?
  • Access to Refugee Protection: A Right to Seek Asylum? Operation Sovereign Borders and Interdiction at Sea
  • Access to Refugee Protection: To Deter, Detain and Deny: Offshore Regional Processing and Human Rights
  • Mandatory Immigration Detention in Australia: Prolonged and Indefinite Detention for Refugees (for Preventive Purposes)?
  • The Nature of Refugee Protection: Temporary versus Permanent Protection Visas
  • Access to Justice: Administrative Justice and the Complexities of Refugee Status Determination
  • The Rule of Law and Refugees: Judicial Review over Refugee Claims

Associate Professor Peter Billings

Peter Billings Dr Peter Billings is an Associate Professor at the TC Beirne School of Law, the University of Queensland, Brisbane, and a Fellow of the Centre for Public, International and Comparative Law. He was the Director of Mooting in the Law School from 2011-2015. In 2014 he was a Senior Visiting Research Fellow at the School of Law, University of Warwick. His research interests are in particular areas of public law, administrative law, immigration and refugee law, social welfare law and the law relating to Indigenous Australians. 

Recently he has published: (with A Cassimatis) "Australia's Codification of Judicial Review - Has the Legislative Effort Been Worth It?" in Matthew Groves (ed), Modern Administrative Law in Australia: Concepts and Context (Cambridge University Press, Australia 2014) 180-204; "Whither Indefinite Immigration Detention: Re-thinking Legal Constraints on the Detention of Non-citizens" (2015) 38(4) University of New South Wales Law Journal 1386-1420; and, "Interception and Incommunicado Detention at Sea: CPCF v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection" (2015) 23(1) Australian Journal of Administrative Law (forthcoming).

 

Course information

Course code
LAWS7849

Course profile

CPD

This course may also be taken as a CPD course or a non-award course. 

CPD details and applications