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In The Foundations of Australian Public Law, Anthony J. Connolly brings together the two traditionally discrete areas of constitutional and administrative law to present Australian public law as a single, integrated body. Exploring the themes of state, power and accountability in Australia, the text also makes reference to the law of international jurisdictions, where students are informed by contemporary public law theory. Particular attention is also given to the rise of global public law and the increasingly cosmopolitan nature of…
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Author
Anthony J. Connolly,Australian National University, Canberra
Anthony J. Connolly is an Associate Professor at the Law School of the Australian National University (ANU). He teaches and researches in the areas of public law, legal philosophy and indigenous rights law. He is the author of Cultural Difference on Trial: The Nature and Limits of Judicial Understanding (2010). He is also the editor of Indigenous Rights (2009), Public Law in the Age of Statutes (with D. Stewart, 2015) and Cultural Heritage Rights (2015). In addition, he has published a number of book chapters and journal articles in his areas of expertise. He has convened and taught the compulsory undergraduate and J.D. courses Australian Public Law and Legal Theory at the ANU for the past ten years. He has been the Editor-in-Chief of Australia's leading journal on Australian federal law and federalism, the Federal Law Review, since 2014.