77885 Legal Process and Legal Research
6cp;
delivered online, however, limited on-campus attendance is required during the legal research component PostgraduateSubject coordinator: S Wesley
Students in this subject are introduced to the Australian legal and constitutional environment including the Western legal tradition and the place of common law in that system. The skills of legal research, case analysis, statutory interpretation, legal problem solving and critical analysis – which are essential to the study and practice of the law – are also developed in the course of students' learning.
Students begin their inquiry by considering what is law, who makes law, and how and why the law has developed in the way that it has. They then examine the institutions that make up our legal system – the legislature, the Crown and the executive, the courts and the 'legal players'. Against the background of this learning students then consider principle areas of Australian law including torts, crime, property, contracts, administrative law, consumer protection and international law.
2007 contribution for post-2004 Commonwealth-supported students: $1,041.62
2007 amount for undergraduate domestic fee-paying students: $2,472.00
Subject EFTSL: 0.125
Note: The above fees are applicable in 2007 for Commonwealth-supported students who commenced after 2004 and domestic fee-paying undergraduate students only. Pre-2005 Commonwealth-supported students should consult the
Student contribution charges for Commonwealth supported students webpage.
Not all students are eligible for Commonwealth supported places, and not all subjects are available to Commonwealth supported students. Domestic fee-paying students and international students should refer to the
Fees webpage.
Note: The requisite information presented in this subject description covers only academic requisites. Full details of all enforced rules, covering both academic and admission requisites, are available at
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