Does Australia’s utilitarian constitution reflect a lack of inspiration on the part of our founding fathers?
On this week’s Afternoon Light Georgina Downer speaks with Ben Saunders to unpack the intent behind the framing of Australia’s constitution. Something which eschewed grand value statements and a Bill of Rights, in favour of trusting the Australian people to ‘breathe life’ into the ‘dry bones’ of constitutional machinery. Under the understanding that it’s ultimately the quality of the electors, rather than the theoretical designing of the institutions, that ultimately determines the success or failure of a democracy.
Dr Ben Saunders is an Associate Professor at Deakin Law School. Ben’s principal areas of research interest are constitutional law, especially executive power and responsible government, law and religion, and public sector governance. He recently published Responsible Government and the Australian Constitution: A Government for a Sovereign People (Hart Studies in Comparative Public Law, 2023). In 2024 he co-authored an Australian Journal of Politics and History article on ‘The Australian Constitutional Framers and the Languages of Virtue’, with Simon Kennedy.
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