“不可能的艺术”的类别:在澳大利亚联邦的协调立法中实现可持续的统一

Q3 Social Sciences Federal Law Review Pub Date : 2020-05-28 DOI:10.1177/0067205X20927808
Guzyal Hill
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引用次数: 1

摘要

国家统一立法将119多年前实现的联邦权力分配与澳大利亚在一个相互关联的世界中面临的挑战和机遇联系起来。在这段时间里,制定国家统一立法被描述为“不可能的艺术”。本文的主要目的是批判性地审查国家统一立法数据库,以期应用公共政策和联邦制理论来解释如何实现可持续的统一。本条不是集中讨论为什么一套统一的法律没有达到高度的统一,或者通过单方面修正而出现分歧,而是通过分析起作用的因素来审查国家统一立法。这种方法可以确定影响可持续统一性的常见模式。在84套统一法案中,发现了四个与理论的明显联系:(1)“渐进主义和政策周期”模型——解释可能需要几十年时间的协调(31套);(2) “多流”框架,解释由于“开放的政策窗口”而从一开始就可持续统一的立法(16套);(3) “务实的联邦制”解决方案,如框架立法和权力授予,这些解决方案是在需要统一但特别难以实现的司法管辖区间谈判过程中制定的(14套);以及(4)“倡导联盟”框架,相比之下,该框架解释了司法管辖区对保持多样性持有坚定观点的情况(23套)。有了这种更好的理解,制定和起草国家统一立法可以成为“可能的艺术”。
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Categories of the ‘Art of the Impossible’: Achieving Sustainable Uniformity in Harmonised Legislation in the Australian Federation
National uniform legislation links the federal distribution of powers achieved more than 119 years ago with the challenges and opportunities faced by Australia in an interconnected world. Over this span of time, developing national uniform legislation has been described as the ‘art of the impossible’. The main objective of this article is to critically examine the database of national uniform legislation with a view to applying public policy and federalist theory to explain how sustainable uniformity has been achieved. Rather than focusing on why an individual set of uniform Acts has not achieved a high level of uniformity or has diverged through unilateral amendment, this article examines national uniform legislation by analysing the factors at play. This approach allows the common patterns impacting sustainable uniformity to be identified. From among 84 sets of uniform Acts, four discernible links with theory have been found: (1) the ‘incrementalism and policy cycle’ model—to explain harmonisation that may take decades (31 sets); (2) the ‘multiple streams’ framework, explaining legislation that emerges as sustainably uniform from the outset due to an ‘open policy window’ (16 sets); (3) ‘pragmatic federalism’ solutions, such as skeletal legislation and the conferral of powers, which are developed in the course of inter-jurisdictional negotiations when uniformity is required but is particularly difficult to achieve (14 sets); and (4) the ‘advocacy coalition’ framework, which in contrast, explains situations where jurisdictions hold firm views about retaining diversity (23 sets). Developing and drafting national uniform legislation can become the ‘art of the possible’ with this improved understanding.
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Federal Law Review
Federal Law Review Social Sciences-Law
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1.00
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