| Monash home | Staff Intranet | Community Legal Services | Law Library | Contact us |
| Staff directory | A-Z index |
|
|
‘Concerning Judicial Method’ – Fifty Years OnThe Hon. Justice Ken Hayne ACMonash Law School's 14th Lucinda Lecture
Speaker profileThe Hon. Justice Ken Hayne AC of the High Court of Australia was appointed to the Court in September 1997. At the time of his appointment he was a judge of the Court of Appeal of Victoria having been appointed one of the foundation judges of the Court in 1995. He graduated in Arts and Law from the University of Melbourne and as a Bachelor of Civil Law from the University of Oxford. Elected Rhodes Scholar for Victoria in 1969, he joined the Victorian Bar in 1971 and was appointed Queen's Counsel for Victoria in 1984. He was appointed a judge of the Supreme Court of Victoria in 1992. He practised in State and Federal courts principally in commercial, constitutional and general civil matters. Justice Hayne was appointed a Companion in the General Division of the Order of Australia in 2002. The Lucinda LecturesThe SS Lucinda was a steam paddle vessel which occupies a sentimental place in Australian constitutional history. It was on board the Lucinda, during a three-day cruise on the Hawkesbury River from 27 to 29 March 1891, that the drafting committee of the National Australasian Convention made important revisions to the earliest drafts of the Constitution. Professor La Nauze in The Making of the Australian Constitution stated; ‘[T]he evolving text of the Constitution was at its best after the Lucinda revisions.’ PatronThe Rt. Hon. Sir Zelman Cowen ConvenorProfessor HP Lee Lucinda Lectures and speakers1993 The Australian Crown: Its creation and demise 1994 Judicial reasonings and responsibilities in constitutional cases 1995 Towards 2001 – minimalism, monarchism or metamorphism? 1996 Social conflict and constitutional interpretation 1997 The Australian Constitution: A centenary assessment 1998 Maintaining public confidence in the judiciary 1999 The Australian Constitution: Adaptability, change and conflict 2000 Australian citizenship: Past, present and future 2001 The shape of representative democracy 2002 Sir Isaac Isaacs and the workings of the Australian Constitution 2003 “…such other federal courts as the Parliament creates”: A hundred years of evolution 2004 What separation of powers? 2005 Judges under fire – how far can the critics go? The Lucinda Lectures have all been published in the Monash University Law Review.
|