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Media Release

Australian Law Reform Commission

Tuesday 23 December

Government to implement ALRC's Sedition Report

Australian Law Reform Commission President, Professor David Weisbrot, welcomed the Government’s positive response to the ALRC’s report Fighting Words: A Review of Sedition Laws in Australia (ALRC 104, 2006), announced today by the Commonwealth Attorney-General, the Hon Robert McClelland MP.

The ALRC made 27 recommendations for reform of the law in this area, and the Government has accepted 25 of these unconditionally and two of them ‘in principle’.  In effect, the Government will be implementing the ALRC report in full. 

Prof Weisbrot commented that “we are naturally delighted with the Government’s formal response. The ALRC Report recognised that free speech and robust political debate are the cornerstones of our democratic society.

“The basic thrust of our recommendations was to create a bright line in the law between free speech—however robust, confronting or unpopular—and conduct calculated to incite violence in the community, which properly should be regarded as criminal activity.

“The law also has to be clear enough to ensure that media commentators, satirists, artists and activists are not only safe from criminal prosecution, but also from the ‘chilling effect’ of uncertainty.”

“Context is critical in these circumstances, so the courts should be required to take into account whether the conduct in question was a part of artistic expression; or genuine academic or scientific discussion; or a news report or commentary,” Prof Weisbrot said.

Prof Weisbrot outlined the major recommendations in the Fighting Words report accepted by the Government, which include:

 

This page was posted 23 December 2008

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