The latest issue of the Northern Territory Law Journal (Volume 2 Part 3) contains the following material:
Articles
The path to statehood: The Northern Territory as Australia’s seventh State – George Williams AO
This article addresses the place of the Northern Territory under the Australian Constitution, and the status of Territorians as “secondclass citizens”. It examines these issues from the perspective of whether they support the Northern Territory pursuing statehood. The article then examines the path to statehood and sets out the means by which statehood may be achieved.
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A doctor’s duty to follow up preventable conditions: Young v Central Australian Aboriginal Congress – A bridge too far? – Patrick Bolton
Until recently, the duty of care imposed on a medical practitioner to follow up a patient only required the doctor to follow up existing conditions. This was in line with the principle of patient autonomy informing the decision in Rogers v Whitaker which shifted the arbiter of the standard of medical care from the medical profession under the Bolam principle, to the courts. In Young v Central Australian Aboriginal Congress Inc, the court effectively extended the duty to follow up to preventable conditions which were latent at the time of the consultation. This article considers the development and juridical basis of the duty and argues that its extension to preventable conditions is contrary to principle and unachievable.
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Sections
- Content of “double jeopardy” in Crown appeals considered by High Court – Cameron Ford
CASE NOTES – Cameron Ford
For the pdf version of the table of contents, click here: NTLJ Vol 2 Pt 3 Contents.