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A History of Australian Tort Law 1901–1945

England's Obedient Servant?

Mark Lunney author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Cambridge University Press

Published:19th Dec '17

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

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A History of Australian Tort Law 1901–1945 cover

Through tort law development, this book adopts a new and innovative approach to writing legal history in Australia.

Argues that Australian discussions of law should be seen through the lens of British race patriotism. Only then can it be recognised that there were distinctively Australian contributions to developing the common law of tort in the first half of the twentieth century.Little attention has been paid to the development of Australian private law throughout the first half of the twentieth century. Using the law of tort as an example, Mark Lunney argues that Australian contributions to common law development need to be viewed in the context of the British race patriotism that characterised the intellectual and cultural milieu of Australian legal practitioners. Using not only primary legal materials but also newspapers and other secondary sources, he traces Australian developments to what Australian lawyers viewed as British common law. The interaction between formal legal doctrine and the wider Australian contexts in which that doctrine applied provided considerable opportunities for nuanced innovation in both the legal rules themselves and in their application. This book will be of interest to both lawyers and historians keen to see how notions of Australian identity have contributed to the development of an Australian law.

ISBN: 9781108423311

Dimensions: 253mm x 178mm x 18mm

Weight: 760g

308 pages