A group of residents living near a newly constructed apartment building are experiencing excessive noise levels at night. They believe the noise is disrupting their sleep and impacting their quality of life. They are considering taking legal action against the building’s developer to seek an injunction to reduce the noise. The residents are concerned about the potential costs and time involved in pursuing a court case.
b. Outline how judicial conservatism or judicial activism could influence a court’s decision regarding whether to grant an injunction in this case. (3 marks)
Marking your answer...
This may take a few seconds
Sign up for free to see your full marking breakdown and personalised study recommendations.
Create Free Account Log inThis is a free VCE Units 3 & 4 Legal Studies practice question worth 3 marks, testing your understanding of Courts' Law-Making Factors. It falls under The people and the law-makers in Unit 4: The people, the law and reform. Submit your answer above to receive instant AI-powered marking and personalised feedback.
The study of Australia’s laws and legal system includes an understanding of institutions that make and reform our laws. In this unit, students explore how the Australian Constitution establishes the law-making powers of the Commonwealth and state parliaments, and how it protects the Australian people through structures that act as a check on parliament in law-making. Students develop an understanding of the significance of the High Court in protecting and interpreting the Australian Constitution. They investigate parliament and the courts, and the relationship between the two in law-making, and consider the roles of the individual, the media and law reform bodies in influencing changes to the law, and past and future constitutional reform. Throughout this unit, students apply legal reasoning and information to actual and/or hypothetical scenarios.
The Australian Constitution establishes Australia’s parliamentary system and provides mechanisms to ensure that parliament does not make laws beyond its powers. Parliament is the supreme law-making body, and courts have a complementary role to parliament in making laws. Courts can make laws through the doctrine of precedent and through statutory interpretation when determining cases. In this area of study, students examine the ways in which the Australian Constitution acts as a check on parliament in law-making, and factors that affect the ability of parliament and courts to make law. They explore the relationship between parliament and courts in law-making and consider the capacity of both institutions to make law.
factors that affect the ability of courts to make law, including: • the doctrine of precedent • judicial conservatism and judicial activism • costs and time in bringing a case to court • the requirement for standing.
All free, all instant AI marking.
The High Court is hearing a case regarding the interpretation of a Commonwealth environmental protection statute. Analyse how judicial conse…
State *four* distinct factors that can impact the ability of courts to make law.
Explain how costs and time in bringing a case to court can impact the ability of courts to make law.
A group of environmental activists wants to challenge a government decision to approve a new coal mine. Which factor affecting the ability o…
Which of the following statements best defines 'judicial conservatism' and its impact on the ability of courts to make law?
Which of the following describes the *most direct* way the doctrine of precedent enables courts to make law?
StudyPulse has thousands of VCE Legal Studies questions with full AI feedback, mark breakdowns, progress tracking, and study notes across every Key Knowledge point including Courts' Law-Making Factors.