Law in the New Democracy

Law in the New Democracy

Authored by: Paula Jane Byrne orcid
 

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Description

In the 1850s, opposition to the Crown in New South Wales made for unsteady ground for the administration of criminal law. This study of skirmishes between magistrates, constables and the metropolis reveals just how far understandings of law could be stretched and warped by recalcitrant local populations. At Carcoar, the local population entirely controlled how law worked; on the South Coast, ‘the people’ influenced how law intervened in their lives; in the north west of the colony, publicans dominated; on the north coast, violence against First Nations/Aboriginal people was forcibly meshed into the day to day working of the courts. This study shows a ‘frontier’ centred on the coasts and in the minds of legal officials of the metropolis, but elsewhere, some recognition of the Aboriginal polity and an early understanding of Aboriginal rights.

With right of reply by First Nations/Aboriginal people

Details

ISBN (print):
9781760467135
ISBN (online):
9781760467142
Publication date:
Jan 2026
Imprint:
ANU Press
DOI:
http://doi.org/10.22459/LND.2025
Disciplines:
Arts & Humanities: History; Law; Social Sciences: Indigenous Studies
Countries:
Australia

PDF Chapters

Law in the New Democracy »

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  1. Democracy (PDF, 167 KB) doi
  2. South (PDF, 465 KB) doi
  3. North-West (PDF, 511 KB) doi
  4. West (PDF, 512 KB) doi
  5. South-West (PDF, 357 KB) doi
  6. North (PDF, 424 KB) doi
  7. Getting into Court (PDF, 241 KB) doi

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