Jenny Hocking
Richard Broinowski reviews ‘Global Responses to Terrorism: 9/11, Afghanistan and beyond’ edited by Mary Buckley and Rick Fawn and ‘Terror Laws: AISO, counter-terrorism and the threat to democracy’ by Jenny Hocking
Does Australia need new laws against terrorism? In 1979 Mr Justice Windeyer of the NSW Supreme Court argued that all the forms of violent wrongdoing that are called terrorism are already punishable as crimes under Commonwealth or state law. The best safeguard against new terrors and apprehensions, he told the Hope Royal Commission on Australia’s Intelligence Agencies, lay in the rigorous enforcement of existing criminal law rather than in making new laws expressly about ‘terrorism’.
... (read more)James Walter reviews 'Lionel Murphy: A political biography' by Jenny Hocking
Lionel Murphy was a prominent and colourful figure in the ALP renaissance of the 1960s and 1970s, and a significant legal intellectual. The extraordinary saga of his final years, when he was hounded by political foes and the press, created a farrago of misunderstanding and innuendo that clouded his reputation. Jenny Hocking has set out to recover Murphy’s public life and to correct the record. Curiously, her emphasis on philosophy and consistency works against the interest of this story: the larrikin edge and the complexity of the man are smoothed away.
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