Verfassungsblog (Feb 2024)

Civil Disobedience and Judicial Theories of Political Change - <p><em>Kvelde v New South Wales</em></p>

  • Liz Hicks

DOI
https://doi.org/10.59704/1eb48c8f22581fcf
Journal volume & issue
no. 2366-7044

Abstract

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This post considers the latest episode of Australia’s engagement with civil disobedience under its constitutionally ‘implied freedom of political communication’ — Kvelde v New South Wales (‘Kvelde’). In Kvelde a judge of the New South Wales Supreme Court followed the tendency of some High Court judges of reducing the democratic value of civil disobedience to binary terms: if a form of political speech is already illegal, the Court will not engage with further legislative acts seeking to increase penalties for it. I describe this as the ‘binary approach.’ I argue that the binary approach reflects a particular judicial theory of political change not necessarily prescribed by the freedom, that is also out of step with historical Australian political practices.

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