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A History of Criminal Law in New South Wales

Volume 2 The New State, 1901-1955

G. D. Woods

$85

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English
Federation Press
19 December 2018
New South Wales was from its origins uniquely connected with the criminal law. The second volume of A History of Criminal Law in New South Wales begins where the

first volume left off in 1901 when the colony became a state.

\nThis is not simply a volume of technicalities and chronologies. Woods relates themes such as criminal punishment, the two World Wars, and the gradualism of change to the characters who inhabit the world of criminal practice, the courts and the gaols. John Norton and Paddy Crick are on the loose again for the first time since 1958, when Cyril Pearl immortalised them in Wild Men of Sydney. Riveting figures haunt these pages, such as Woolcott Forbes, the famous corporate fraudster of the 1930s and 1940s known in the press as “The Bullfighter”; a policeman with the improbable name of Mendelssohn Bartholdy Miller; and Major Charles Cousens, the plum-voiced prisoner-of-war and radio who faced charges of treason when he was returned to Australia at war’s end.

\nThese and dozens of other characters (including notable judges, magistrates and practitioners) populate this continuation of the history of criminal law in New South Wales up to the mid-20th century when the death penalty was effectively abolished. Woods draws on his wide experience of the criminal law as an academic, law reformer, barrister and judge to describe the development of the law in its social, economic and political contexts. A History of Criminal Law in New South Wales is an essential and fascinating read for legal practitioners and historians.

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*Listen to interview: Greg Woods QC on ABC Radio National, A History of Criminal Law in NSW on Late Night Live with Phillip Adams

12th August 2019. Greg discusses fortune telling, sedition, homosexuality - they may not get a lot of prosecutions these days but historically they've been taken very seriously. Find out more about the history of criminal law. Click here
By:  
Imprint:   Federation Press
Country of Publication:   Australia
Dimensions:   Height: 234mm,  Width: 156mm, 
Weight:   1.510kg
ISBN:   9781760021931
ISBN 10:   1760021938
Pages:   896
Publication Date:  
Audience:   College/higher education ,  General/trade ,  Primary ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
"1. New Century, New State, Old Problems 2. The Poisoned Chalice of Mercy 3. Not A Code: The Common Law and the Queen’s Washerwoman 4. Mixed Motives in Edwardian Criminal Laws: Protection and Control 5. “Too Many Seconds”: TM Slattery and the Law of Theft 6. “A Shilling An Acre”: The Crown Lands Scandals 1905-1907 7. A Grudging Step Towards Legal Aid 8. The Scorchers: Taming the Horseless Carriage 9. Mixed Motives Again: The Aborigines Protection Act 1909 10. Criminal Law and Economics: The “Leg-Iron” Election of 1910 11. Wing-Collar Crime: The Coal Vend, and Big Sugar 12. Age of Consent: The Girls’ Protection Act, 1910 13. Trial and Error: The Criminal Appeal Act 1912 14. Making War and Making Crimes: 1914–1916 15. The Grass Parliament, and Aftershocks: 1916-1920 16. Some Elections, Tom Bavin and a Wedding Law: 1920-1925 17. John Latham and Commonwealth Crimes: Saviour from Subversion 18. Lang, Bavin, Razors and Reform 19. Hard Times: Depression and the State Criminal Law 20. Latham Again, Menzies, and a Popular Czech, 1932–1935 21. The Right Suspect, and Sane 22. Craig, Davies and Cody: A Dissent, and a Caution 23. The Golden Thread and the Golden Threads 24. Two Tall Poppies: Homosexuals and the Courts between the Wars 25. The Musical Policeman: Illicit Betting Inquiries, 1936-1938 26. War Again: Regulations and Resistance 27. A Welcome Occupation: Americans, Police Scandal and the Courts 28. War from a Magistrate’s Bench 29. Hardly Treason: The Case of Major Cousens 30. Justinian in Khaki: CE Martin and the Public Defender 31. Police Interrogation at Mid-Century: ""Realism"", ""Sentiment"" and an angry Chief Justice 32. More Democratic Juries, and the Ladies' Auxiliary 33. Cold War and Hot Words: Sedition and Lance Sharkey, 1949 34. ""Kiss-in-the-ring"": State Crimes Act Amendments of 1951 35. ""Reffos, Balts and Wogs"": New Australians in the Criminal Courts, 1945-1955 36. The Beer Rebellion: Barwick and the Fibbers 37. Police Scrumdown, a Royal Distraction and the Press Barons 38. ""Fallen Among Christians"": Death Penalty Abolition, 1955"

Greg Woods is an Adjunct Professor of Law at the University of NSW Law School.

Reviews for A History of Criminal Law in New South Wales: Volume 2 The New State, 1901-1955

The new state of which this magnificent work speaks was new in two senses. The colony of NSW had become a state of the new federal Commonwealth of Australia. Less visibly, the government of NSW over the half century the subject of the work was to become more regulatory and more invasive. The pace of change - whether caused by federation, or two wars, or the great depression, or political philosophy, or the development of democracy itself - occurred so quickly in historical terms that mere qualitative change from pre-1901 to post-1955 justifies the title. ... The hero in Woods' history is this incoherent liberalism, a resilient belief that the government in any civilised society is not merely about the exercise of power, or even about its restraint, but about also an explanation of that exercise for the rest of us. It is a tale well told. - David Ash, Francis Forbes Society Newsletter, February 2019


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