
Nina Boughey
@drninaboughey
Associate Professor, UNSW Law and Justice. Administrative law. Government accountability. 😻
ID: 2816568698
18-09-2014 07:40:33
342 Tweet
1,1K Followers
322 Following

I have a new article in the UNSW Law Journal dissecting recent developments in Australia's unreasonableness 'ground'. Includes a brief discussion of Djokovic's case for those who only followed me for the (very limited) tennis content. unswlawjournal.unsw.edu.au/article/legal-…

"Lisa Burton Crawford and Nina Boughey are on firm ground. The High Court has repeatedly endorsed the continued distinction between jurisdictional and non-jurisdictional error of law as necessary and useful in Australian law as it gives effect to the constitutionally entrenched ..." 2/3



Wonderful watching ᴅʀ ᴅᴇᴀɴ ᴋɴɪɢʜᴛ present in person (not zoom!), speaking about the grounds of review at the PublicLaw Conference in Dublin!


What insights might be gleaned from an attempt to consider Dicey's theory of the constitution as a product of its place and time? Our next event is discussion of a new work considering these issues by Mark Walters with Nina Boughey and @LBlayden eventbrite.com.au/e/global-book-…

Join us for an upcoming Zoom cafe, convened by Nina Boughey, on the administrative state.



Public Law's April 2023 issue is now available via Westlaw UK, feat a collection of analysis pieces on govt outsourcing c/o Nina Boughey and @JoePTomlinson (contributions from Janet McLean; @VictoriaAdamant and @JoePTomlinson; ACL Davies, Elinor Buys and James Ruairi Macdonald;

Super proud of my UNSW Law & Justice honours student Matthew McLeod for writing this fantastic article (which is developed from his thesis).



New today on AUSPUBLAW: Nina Boughey discusses doctrines of deference in Australian administrative law. auspublaw.org/blog/2023/10/a…


The brilliant Ellen Rock explaining the biggest proposed reform to Australian admin law in the past 50 years.


New today on AUSPUBLAW: Nina Boughey discusses the High Court’s recent judgment in MICMA v McQueen and reflects on departmental advice in ministerial decision-making. auspublaw.org/home/2024/5/de…
