Monday, December 22, 2008
Aroney on Australia and ideas about federalism in the late 19th century
A Commonwealth of Commonwealths: Late Nineteenth Century Conceptions of Federalism and Their Impact on Australian Federation, 1890-1901 is an article by Nicholas Aroney, University of Queensland - TC Beirne School of Law. It appeared in The Journal of Legal History (2002). Here's the abstract: This article utilizes the Australian experience of federation, 1890-1901, as a vehicle for the discussion of the leading conceptions of federalism extant in the late nineteenth-century English-speaking world. In particular, the article examines the federal theories of James Madison, James Bryce, Edward Freeman, Albert Dicey and John Burgess in the context of many others, and seeks to show that the idea of a 'Commonwealth of commonwealths', although controverted by contending theories, remained a central theme in late nineteenth-century conceptions of federalism.