Terms & Concepts
Human Rights
Crime
World Order
FamBam
100

‘Buyer beware’ the principle that the buyer alone is responsible for checking the quality and suitability of goods before a purchase is made.

Caveat Emptor.

100

The three formal statements of human rights that make up the 'International Bill of Rights'

UDHR (1948), ICESCR (1966), ICCPR (1966)

100

The key statute law governing Police Powers in NSW.

Law Enforcement (powers & responsibilities) Act 2002 – LEPRA

100

Define World Order

What is the way in which global events are influenced by major actors in the world.

100

The act governing Family Law

Family Law Act 1975 (Cth)

200

The principle that nations may govern themselves without external interference. A barrier to the enforcement of international law.

State Sovereignty.

200

One example of a collective right.

Environmental and peace rights, or the right to self-determination

200

This may be drawn in court if an accused person chooses to remain silent and chooses not to cooperate during questioning in the investigation process under the Evidence Amendment (Evidence of Silence Act) 2013.

Negative Inference

200

What does NATO stand for and what conflicts have they been involved in?

North Atlantic Trade Organisation - 

Kosovo, Afghanistan, refused Ukraine/Russia involvement 

200

The guiding principle surrounding children?

"in the best interests of the child"

300

Principles which ensure that the operation of courts are fair and just. Ie. The right to know the case against you, to present your case, and the right to a decision which is free from bias and is based on relevant evidence.

Procedural Fairness.

300

The international human rights legislation enforced by The UN Human Rights Commission (UNHRC) and The UN Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC)

UNHRC enforces the ICCPR (1966)

ECOSOC enforces the ICESCR (1966)

300

Three complete defences.

Mental Illness, Self Defence, Necessity, Duress, Consent, or Automatism

300

Legal responses for dealing with WO - name four

Any of the legal responses we have studied

300

Name 4 pieces of legislation that cover marriage, adoption, care and protection of children and surrogacy. 

Marriage Act 1961 (Cth)

Adoption Act 2000 (NSW)

Children and Young Persons (Care and Protections) Act 1998 (NSW)

Surrogacy Act 2010 (NSW) 

400

The two latin terms referring to the guilty act and the intent involved in a crime.

Actus Reus and Mens Rea

400

One argument FOR and one argument AGAINST a charter of rights.

FOR - A Charter of Rights would strengthen the legal framework for the protection of human rights in Australia, and protect the most vulnerable citizens in society. It is easier to access these rights from one source - E.g. a Charter of Rights.

AGAINST - We have a vibrant democracy in Australia and we do not need a Charter of Rights, listing our rights in this way may actually limit them. A Charter of Rights would represent the current values of our society when it is written, these values can become outdated.

400

'Doli incapax' (latin for ‘incapable of wrong’) applies to children under the age of _____, and no longer applies from the age of _____ in NSW.

Doli incapax applies to children under the age of 10, and no longer applies from the age of 14 in NSW.

400

What conflict did the R2p principle arise from?

What is Rwandan genocide

400

Identify the two types of surrogacy, which is legal in NSW?

altruistic and commercial - commercial is illegal

500

The difference between the Division of Powers and the Separation of Powers.

The Division of Powers refers to how power is divided under the Australian Constitution among state and federal governments - exclusive, concurrent, and residual powers.

The separation of Powers refers to separating the  government executive, legislature and judiciary to prevent abuses of power.

500

Three ways that the Australian constitution supports human rights protections.

  • The separation of powers doctrine

  • The division of powers between the commonwealth and the states

  • Express and implied rights

    • Express rights: clearly expressed or outlined in the text - can only be removed by changing the wording of the Constitution.

    • Implied rights: not clearly expressed in the words of the Constitution, however are nevertheless suggested or inferred by them.

  • The nature of the constitution as a document that is difficult to amend/ change

500

The two reforms introduced after the R v Loveridge verdict.

Crimes (Sentencing & Procedure) Amendment (Family Victim Impact Statement) Act 2014 (NSW) - If the offender is guilty of murder, judges can take family victim impact statements into account when sentencing. Clear and consistent structure for the consideration of victim impact statements.

Crimes and Other Legislation Amendment (Assault and Intoxication) Act 2014 - amended the statutory guidelines set out in the Crimes Act 1900 for the offence of ‘assault causing death’, which now require offenders who are intoxicated at the time of the offence to receive a mandatory minimum sentence of 8 years imprisonment.

500

The four main contemporary issues we studied

R2P

Global and regional conflicts that threaten peace and security 

Global cooperation in achieving WO

Rules regarding conduct of hostilities 


500

Legal responses to DV (be specific) 

The main legal responses to domestic violence are through:

- Apprehended violence orders (AVOs), in particular apprehended domestic violence orders (ADVOs)

- Criminal charges

- Family court injunctions and other orders