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Area of Study 1. Chapter 1: Law in Society. Differences between legal and non-legal rules. Rules tell us what we can and cannot do. The Need for Laws. Main aims of the law: Protect society Keep society functioning Protect individual rights - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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CHAPTER 1 : LAW IN SOCIETY
Area of Study 1
Differences between legal and non-legal rules
Rules tell us what we can and cannot do
Classification Law-makers Enforcement
Non-legal rules Made by private individuals or groups, e.g. parents, schools
Cannot be enforced through the courts
Legal rules Made by law-making bodies with the force of law, e.g. parliament, local councils
Can be enforced through the courts
The Need for Laws
Main aims of the law: Protect society Keep society functioning Protect individual rights Stop behaviours that affect the good order of society Provide guidelines of acceptable behaviour and
prevent conflict
Known to the Public Acceptable to the community
If a new law is not communicated to the public it cannot be followed
Major law changes are often reported in the media
Speed laws change along the roads, signs inform the public
If the law is not acceptable people may disregard it
If a law is no longer acceptable to the community it needs to be changed
Characteristics of an effective law
Able to be enforced Stable
If people break the law they must be able to be caught and bought to justice
If not people will not follow the law
If the law is constantly changing no-one would know what the law was and there would be chaos
Characteristics continued…
Able to be changed
A law needs to be able to change with changes in community values
Laws need to change to keep up with changes in technology
Learning Activity 1.3, Question 7
Online Investigation for homework
Characteristics continued…
Different Types of Laws
a) Criminal and Civil lawb) Way laws are made
Laws made by parliament – acts of parliament Laws made by sub-ordinate authorities – e.g. local
councils Laws made by courts
Criminal Law
Aims: To apprehend, prosecute and punish people who have
broken the law To deter others from breaking the law
Examples of Criminal Law Words commonly used
Crimes against: -person (e.g. murder, assault, rape) -property (e.g. theft, vandalism, fraud) -morality (e.g. prostitution, drug use) -the legal system (e.g. perjury, contempt of court) -the state (e.g. treason)
-prosecution, the Crown, the state (party bringing the case on behalf of the state)-accused, the offender (the person who has been charged with an offence)-suspect (person who is suspected of a crime)-guilty/not guilty-charge-sentence-conviction
Civil Law
Civil law involves a dispute between two parties
The aim of civil law is to return the person whose rights have been infringed back to their original positionExamples of Civil Law Words commonly used
-tort law (e.g. negligence, nuisance)-family law (e.g. marriage, adoption, divorce)-industrial and workplace laws (e.g. OHS, workplace agreements)-consumer law (e.g. advertising law, tenancy agreements)-property law (e.g. wills, real estate purchases)
-plaintiff-defendant-sue-compensation-damages-civil wrong-defamation-negligence
Criminal or civil?
When deciding if a case is civil or criminal, you should look at: The consequences The intention of the case (Does the case seek a civil
remedy such as compensation? Or does it seek to punish the offender?)
Learning Activity 1.4 Questions 2-3
Law-making in Australia
3 Levels of law-making bodies: Commonwealth Parliament – makes laws for the entire
country in a range of areas State and territory parliaments – laws given in the
constitution for each state to make separately Local councils – address minor issues in their area
within the state
Role and characteristics of parliament
Modelled on the British Westminster systemRelies on the government of the day having
the support of the majority of the members of the lower house of parliament to govern
Role of parliament is to pass laws for the good government of the country or state
Commonwealth and Victorian Parliaments are bicameral which means two separate houses.
Basic Structure of ParliamentCommonwealth Parliament
Victorian Parliament
Queen’s representative
Governor-general Governor
Upper House Senate Legislative Council
Lower House House of Representatives
Legislative Assembly
Government: Members of the political party that holds the majority of seats/members in the LOWER house. They propose bills, but the whole of parliament has to pass them.
Opposition: Next largest political party in the lower house. They question the government about policy matters.
Prime Minister or Premier Cabinet
The leader of the winning political party becomes the head of government
Prime Minister at the federal level, Premier at the state level
Head of government selects a cabinet made up of senior ministers
Cabinet is the policy-making body of government
It proposes new policies and directions
It decides what proposed laws will be presented to parliament for debate
House of Representatives (Lower House)
Senate (Upper House)
role is to represent the people, introduce and pass proposed laws (bills) and for the government
those elected hold seat for three years
150 members
76 senators elected altogether (12 per state, 2 for territories)
election for half senate seats every 3 years, elected for 6 years
role to introduce and pass bills, to review bills passed by the House of Reps
Commonwealth Parliament
Legislative Assembly (Lower House)
Legislative Council (Upper House)
Role is to introduce and pass bills and to form government for state
those elected hold seats for 4 years
88 members
40 membersreview bills passed
by the Legislative Assembly, can reject of amend bills
hold seats for four years
Victorian Parliament
Influencing Changes in the Law
parliaments are elected by the people and should therefore make laws that reflect the needs of the people
law must change when the need arisesfor people to succeed in influencing a law, it
is important that the media backs the change
Law-making Through Parliament
Government decides what changes in the law to initiate
a bill (proposed law) is drawn up and presented to parliament
Copy Diagram of a bills journey though parliament from page 27
Law-making by Subordinate Authorities
Parliaments do not have the time or expertise to pass all the laws necessary for running the country
they delegate some of their law-making power to subordinate authorities
The are experts in their field and are more accessible to members of the public
Enabling Act: gives the subordinate authority power to make laws, outlines guidelines for law-making
Examples of Subordinate Authorities
Statutory Authorities: bodies that are created by an act of parliament (e.g. Environment Protection Agency, Australia Post)
Government Departments: government decides on general policies to be administered by government departments such as the Department of Human Services
Executive Council: made up of state governor and relevant ministers, make many regulations on behalf of statutory authorities and government departments
Local Councils: make local laws for their area. Each area has different needs and local councils are more aware of the needs of people in their area
Learning Activity Revision Questions
Learning Activity 1.3 questions 1, 2, 3, 4Learning Activity 1.6 questions 1, 4, 5, 6, 7Learning Activity 1.7 questions 1 – 4Learning Activity 1.8 questions 1-3Learning Activity 1.9 questions 3-5Learning Activity 1.10 questions 1-4Practice Exam Questions 1-4