fbpx
Wikipedia

Mary Gaudron

Mary Genevieve Gaudron KC (born 5 January 1943), is an Australian lawyer and judge, who was the first female Justice of the High Court of Australia. She was the Solicitor-General of New South Wales from 1981 until 1987 before her appointment to the High Court. After her retirement in 2002, she joined the International Labour Organization, serving as the President of its Administrative Tribunal from 2011 until 2014.

Mary Gaudron
Mary Gaudron (left) with PM Julia Gillard, GG Quentin Bryce, AG Nicola Roxon in 2011
Justice of the High Court of Australia
In office
6 February 1987 – 31 January 2003
Nominated byBob Hawke
Appointed byNinian Stephen
Preceded byAnthony Mason
Succeeded byDyson Heydon
Personal details
Born
Mary Genevieve Gaudron

(1943-01-05) 5 January 1943 (age 80)
Moree, New South Wales
NationalityAustralian
Spouses
  • Ben Nurse (sep.?)
  • John Fogarty
Children2 daughters and 1 son
Alma materUniversity of Sydney

Early life

Gaudron was born in Moree, in northern rural New South Wales in 1943, the daughter of working-class parents Edward and Grace Gaudron. She would later speak about the intense racism towards Indigenous Australians which was part of everyday life in Moree and how it influenced her strong opposition to all forms of discrimination.[1] In 1965, Moree was the site of a violent conflict during the Freedom Ride.

In 1951, H. V. Evatt passed through Moree to campaign for the "no" case in the 1951 referendum, at which the Menzies Liberal government was attempting to alter the Constitution of Australia in order to ban the Australian Communist Party. Evatt was addressing a small crowd from the back of a blue Holden ute, discussing the upcoming referendum and the Constitution, and Gaudron, not knowing what Evatt was referring to, asked "Please sir, what's a Constitution?" Evatt explained that it was "the laws by which Parliaments were governed." Gaudron asked whether it was similar to the Ten Commandments and Evatt replied that "you could call it the Ten Commandments of government." Gaudron then asked for a copy and Evatt subsequently sent her one in the mail. Gaudron, expecting two stone tablets, was disappointed to receive only a small pamphlet. However, when the school bullies declared the pamphlet useless, Gaudron retorted that it was of great use to lawyers, and that some day she would be one.[1][2]

Education

Gaudron was educated at St Ursula's College in Armidale.[3] In 1960 Gaudron was awarded a federal government scholarship to study for a Bachelor of Arts degree at the University of Sydney, which she graduated with in 1962. In 1961 she also commenced a part-time Bachelor of Laws degree, graduating in 1965 with first-class honours and the University's Medal for Law. Gaudron was the second female recipient, after Elizabeth Evatt, and the first female part-time student to be awarded the medal.[2]

While studying, Gaudron attempted to obtain articles of clerkship (then five years in duration), but was not successful. She later said, "Many distinguished lawyers took a lot of trouble and effort to explain to me that it was not their policy to take on women as articled clerks."[1]

Instead, she took a job with the Australian Public Service, although, in accordance with the then regulations, she was required to relinquish her employment when she married. In 1988, Gaudron was awarded an honorary doctorate in law from Macquarie University, and another from the University of Sydney in 1999.[citation needed]

Career

Barrister

Gaudron was admitted to the New South Wales Bar in October 1968 after having completed her articles of clerkship and commenced practice as a barrister. She attempted to buy a room for herself in one of the barristers' chambers in Sydney but was regularly knocked back because she was a woman. When future High Court colleague Michael McHugh attempted to sell his room, the other members of his chambers would not let Gaudron buy it, although there were no other buyers.[1] She eventually shared a room with Janet Coombs, another pioneering female barrister.[2] Gaudron regularly argued before the Supreme Court of New South Wales and the High Court in the early 1970s, particularly in the area of industrial law. In 1972 she became the first woman to be appointed to the Council of the New South Wales Bar.[citation needed]

Gaudron's first major breakthrough was in 1970 with O'Shaughnessy v Mirror Newspapers Ltd,[4] where as a 27-year-old junior counsel she successfully argued the matter single-handedly before the High Court after the plaintiff, Peter O'Shaughnessy, sacked his senior counsel, Clive Evatt QC, preferring her ability over the veteran. According to O'Shaughnessy, 'she cut a valiant figure, this "slip of a girl", who stood unsupported before the five legal elders of the land. They were obviously impressed by her courage, her sheer elegant dash, her shining intellect finding expression in felicitous language, her good manners, charm, poise. And perhaps, when all is said and done, by her sheer cheek in taking on the case.'[5]

Another one of Gaudron's significant cases was in 1972, when she successfully argued the Equal Pay case for the Whitlam Labor government before the Conciliation and Arbitration Commission.[6]

Early in 1972, Gaudron had entered a bar with a male barrister friend when the waitress informed the friend that the bar did not serve women. Gaudron "patiently explained to the barmaid that my friend didn't want a woman because he'd brought his own," eventually creating "something of a scene" which attracted the attention of Labor politician Clyde Cameron, who said that he didn't realise such sexual discrimination still existed. Gaudron said that "the discrimination being practised in that particular hotel was nothing compared to the discrimination over which he would undoubtedly preside when he became Minister for Industrial Relations after the next election."[1] However, the Whitlam government was elected on 2 December, and Cameron duly became Minister for Industrial Relations. Whitlam called Gaudron on 3 December to hire her to argue the case for equal pay.[citation needed]

The case, begun by the Australian Council of Trade Unions and supported by the Whitlam government, extended the reach of the original but limited equal pay decision of 1969. Prior decisions had guaranteed equal pay only for certain specific occupations and later, certain limited industries (industries traditionally considered 'women's work', such as the textile industry), whereas this case extended the principle of equal pay to all workers. Gaudron's argument was based on the principles of the 1951 Equal Remuneration Convention of the International Labour Organization (an organisation she would later work for). However, Gaudron later came to regard her argument, that Australia had not ratified the Convention because the commission would not grant equal pay (thus preventing Australia from fulfilling its obligations under the convention), as somewhat disingenuous, and recalled it with a measure of embarrassment.[1]

Conciliation and Arbitration Commission

In April 1974, Gaudron was appointed to the Conciliation and Arbitration Commission as Deputy President, becoming the youngest ever federal judge. It was rumoured that Cameron had advocated in Cabinet for her appointment, first by emphasising her outstanding academic record, then by noting her humble working-class background, to which Whitlam supposedly said, "Next you'll be telling us she was born in a bloody manger!"[7]

Gaudron's most notable case on the Arbitration Commission was an important test case for maternity leave in 1979, which laid down award standards allowing for a year's unpaid leave for all full-time and permanent part-time workers.[8] In 1979–1980, Gaudron was the inaugural chair of the NSW Legal Services Commission. Gaudron held the position of Deputy President until her resignation in May 1980.[9]

Lecturer, QC and Solicitor-General

Gaudron lectured at the University of New South Wales' law school for a brief time, then in February 1981 she was appointed the Solicitor-General of New South Wales, the first female Solicitor-General in any Australian jurisdiction. That same year, she was made a Queen's Counsel (QC), the first female QC in New South Wales. In her capacity as Solicitor-General, Gaudron argued for New South Wales in such landmark High Court cases as the Tasmanian Dams case. From 1981 to 1986, she served on the Council of Macquarie University, and from 1984 to 1986, chaired an advisory council at the University of Wollongong.[7]

High Court Justice

The death of Justice Lionel Murphy in October 1986 and the retirement of Chief Justice Harry Gibbs in February 1987 created two vacancies on the High Court. On 6 February 1987,[10] John Toohey and Gaudron were appointed to the court. At just 44 years of age, Gaudron was the fourth youngest Justice, after Evatt, McTiernan and Dixon, as well as the first female Justice.[11]

As a High Court Justice, Gaudron contributed to every area of Australian law, most notably to Australian criminal law, in judgments that "combine technical mastery with a general tendency to insist on strict compliance by trial judges with their obligations in directing juries".[2] Gaudron was part of the progressive Mason and Brennan courts, which decided such influential cases as Cole v Whitfield,[12] Dietrich v The Queen,[13] and the Mabo case.[14] Gaudron was consistently opposed to all forms of discrimination, with notable judgments in this vein including the decision in Street v Queensland Bar Association (on Section 117 of the Constitution of Australia)[15] and her joint judgment with Justice McHugh in Castlemaine Tooheys Ltd v South Australia.[2][16]

Gaudron was generally regarded as not particularly emotive in her writing style, although the judgment for which she is perhaps best remembered popularly was the Mabo case, where, in a joint judgment with Justice Deane, she said that Australia's past treatment of Indigenous Australians was "the darkest aspect of the history of this nation".[14]

The award of Companion of the Order of Australia (AC) was made to six of the seven serving High Court justices in the Bicentennial Australia Day Honours of 1988.[17] Gaudron had declined the award without explanation.[7]

On 19 September 1997 Gaudron was appointed the founding Patron of Australian Women Lawyers and continued in this role until 20 February 2009.[18]

Retirement

On 21 June 2002, Gaudron announced her retirement from the High Court, effective from 10 February 2003. She left the court at the age of just 60, ten years before she reached the mandatory retirement age. Gaudron's early retirement was lamented by all areas of the legal profession. Justice Michael Kirby, who was a close friend of Gaudron, has stated many times that her absence left the court with a different character and turned it into "a more blokey place".[19]

In March 2003, Gaudron joined the International Labour Organization (ILO) in Geneva, Switzerland. In 2004 she was a member of an inquiry into trade union rights in Belarus.[1] She was also appointed as a judge of the ILO's Administrative Tribunal. From July 2011, she has been appointed as President of the Tribunal.[20]

Criticism

Gaudron has occasionally been criticised throughout her career. At the time of her appointment to the High Court in 1987, the New South Wales legal magazine Justinian published anonymous remarks stating "a melancholy catalogue of sins of omission and commission as well as the better claims of others" ought to have weighed against her appointment,[21] and that she held "an emotional disposition inappropriate in a holder of judicial office".[2] Jack Waterford in The Canberra Times observed that her appointment would likely be controversial as she was "strongly identified with the Labor Party, and despite a formidable career, has not generally been regarded as in the front rank of the legal profession".[22]

When she announced her retirement, an anonymous academic said that Gaudron had failed to achieve the expectations set by her supporters, and that among the other High Court Justices, Gaudron was "erratic" and "certainly not among the court's greats".[21] Another anonymous academic said that Gaudron's Labor connections had delivered her unearned promotions.[21]

Approbation

Despite this anonymous criticism, Gaudron also received much praise. Former President of the New South Wales Bar, Ruth McColl, described Gaudron's contribution to Australian law as "an extraordinarily humanising effect ... the strong views she expresses in cases involving discrimination and like issues, are very influential and important in the development of the law in those areas".[23] The Anti-Discrimination Commissioner of Tasmania, Jocelynne Scutt, said that "her contribution has been outstanding both as a jurist and as an advocate. And it has been profoundly significant in terms of her being a woman, too."[21] Former Chief Justice Anthony Mason remarked that Gaudron's "contribution just can't be described as symbolic", but rather she had "made a very significant and genuine contribution" to Australian law.[21]

Gaudron described herself in 2005 as privileged "to be a bit player in the maintenance of the rule of law in Australia".[1]

Family

Gaudron has two daughters, Danielle and Julienne, with her first husband, Ben Nurse. Danielle was born during her final year of Law School and Julienne was a baby at her appointment to the Arbitration Commission. She also has a son, Patrick, with her second husband, John Fogarty.[7][24]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h . Women Lawyers Association of South Australia. Archived from the original on 29 September 2007. Retrieved 24 June 2006.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Kalowski, Henrik (2001). "Gaudron, Mary Genevieve". In Blackshield, Tony; Coper, Michael; Williams (eds.). The Oxford Companion to the High Court of Australia. South Melbourne, Victoria: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-554022-0.
  3. ^ Burton, Pamela (2010). From Moree to Mabo: The Mary Gaudron Story. Trans Pacific Press. p. 39. ISBN 9781742580982.
  4. ^ O'Shaughnessy v Mirror Newspapers Ltd ("Othello case") [1970] HCA 52, (1970) 125 CLR 166, High Court (Australia).
  5. ^ Official website of Peter O'Shaughnessy 2 January 2014 at the Wayback Machine, peteroshaughnessy.info; accessed 29 September 2015.
  6. ^ Burton, Pamela, (2010) From Moree to Mabo: The Mary Gaudron Story: University of Western Australia Press, Perth
  7. ^ a b c d McMurdo, M.A. (2003). (PDF). Queensland Courts. Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 August 2006. Retrieved 26 June 2006.
  8. ^ O'Neill, Steve. . Parliament of Australia Parliamentary Library. Archived from the original on 29 April 2006. Retrieved 26 June 2006.
  9. ^ Blackshield, Tony; Coper, Michael; Williams, George (2001). "The Oxford Companion to the High Court of Australia" (PDF). Oxford University Press Australia. Retrieved 4 February 2018.
  10. ^ "Justice Gaudron will retire today". The Courier-Mail. 11 February 2003. p. 7.
  11. ^ Karp, Paul (30 January 2017). "Susan Kiefel becomes Australia's first female chief justice of the high court". The Guardian. Retrieved 5 February 2017.
  12. ^ Cole v Whitfield [1988] HCA 18, (1988) 165 CLR 360, High Court (Australia).
  13. ^ Dietrich v The Queen [1992] HCA 57, 177 CLR 292, High Court (Australia).
  14. ^ a b Mabo v Queensland (No 2) [1992] HCA 23, (1992) 175 CLR 1 (3 June 1992), High Court.
  15. ^ Street v Queensland Bar Association [1989] HCA 53, 168 CLR 461, High Court (Australia).
  16. ^ Castlemaine Tooheys Ltd v South Australia [1990] HCA 1, (1990) 169 CLR 436, High Court (Australia).
  17. ^ Six High Court judges head Australia Day honours, in Canberra Times, 26 January 1988
  18. ^ "Our History". Australian Women Lawyers. Retrieved 4 February 2018.
  19. ^ Attard, Monica (16 November 2003). . Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Archived from the original on 20 August 2006.
  20. ^ "ILO".
  21. ^ a b c d e Shiel, Fergus (9 December 2002). "A different kind of Justice". The Age. Australia.
  22. ^ "Gaudron, Toohey the two on High Court list". The Canberra Times. 5 December 1986.
  23. ^ Carrick, Damien (2003). "Changing of the Guard at the High Court". Radio National: The Law Report. Retrieved 26 June 2006.
  24. ^ Lawson, Valerie (23 March 2002). "Two Silky Susans in line to do justice to court's gender agenda". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 10 January 2014.
Legal offices
Preceded by
Gregory Sullivan
Solicitor General for New South Wales
1981–1987
Succeeded by

mary, gaudron, mary, genevieve, gaudron, born, january, 1943, australian, lawyer, judge, first, female, justice, high, court, australia, solicitor, general, south, wales, from, 1981, until, 1987, before, appointment, high, court, after, retirement, 2002, joine. Mary Genevieve Gaudron KC born 5 January 1943 is an Australian lawyer and judge who was the first female Justice of the High Court of Australia She was the Solicitor General of New South Wales from 1981 until 1987 before her appointment to the High Court After her retirement in 2002 she joined the International Labour Organization serving as the President of its Administrative Tribunal from 2011 until 2014 The HonourableMary GaudronKCMary Gaudron left with PM Julia Gillard GG Quentin Bryce AG Nicola Roxon in 2011Justice of the High Court of AustraliaIn office 6 February 1987 31 January 2003Nominated byBob HawkeAppointed byNinian StephenPreceded byAnthony MasonSucceeded byDyson HeydonPersonal detailsBornMary Genevieve Gaudron 1943 01 05 5 January 1943 age 80 Moree New South WalesNationalityAustralianSpousesBen Nurse sep John FogartyChildren2 daughters and 1 sonAlma materUniversity of Sydney Contents 1 Early life 2 Education 3 Career 3 1 Barrister 3 2 Conciliation and Arbitration Commission 3 3 Lecturer QC and Solicitor General 3 4 High Court Justice 3 5 Retirement 4 Criticism 5 Approbation 6 Family 7 See also 8 ReferencesEarly life EditGaudron was born in Moree in northern rural New South Wales in 1943 the daughter of working class parents Edward and Grace Gaudron She would later speak about the intense racism towards Indigenous Australians which was part of everyday life in Moree and how it influenced her strong opposition to all forms of discrimination 1 In 1965 Moree was the site of a violent conflict during the Freedom Ride In 1951 H V Evatt passed through Moree to campaign for the no case in the 1951 referendum at which the Menzies Liberal government was attempting to alter the Constitution of Australia in order to ban the Australian Communist Party Evatt was addressing a small crowd from the back of a blue Holden ute discussing the upcoming referendum and the Constitution and Gaudron not knowing what Evatt was referring to asked Please sir what s a Constitution Evatt explained that it was the laws by which Parliaments were governed Gaudron asked whether it was similar to the Ten Commandments and Evatt replied that you could call it the Ten Commandments of government Gaudron then asked for a copy and Evatt subsequently sent her one in the mail Gaudron expecting two stone tablets was disappointed to receive only a small pamphlet However when the school bullies declared the pamphlet useless Gaudron retorted that it was of great use to lawyers and that some day she would be one 1 2 Education EditGaudron was educated at St Ursula s College in Armidale 3 In 1960 Gaudron was awarded a federal government scholarship to study for a Bachelor of Arts degree at the University of Sydney which she graduated with in 1962 In 1961 she also commenced a part time Bachelor of Laws degree graduating in 1965 with first class honours and the University s Medal for Law Gaudron was the second female recipient after Elizabeth Evatt and the first female part time student to be awarded the medal 2 While studying Gaudron attempted to obtain articles of clerkship then five years in duration but was not successful She later said Many distinguished lawyers took a lot of trouble and effort to explain to me that it was not their policy to take on women as articled clerks 1 Instead she took a job with the Australian Public Service although in accordance with the then regulations she was required to relinquish her employment when she married In 1988 Gaudron was awarded an honorary doctorate in law from Macquarie University and another from the University of Sydney in 1999 citation needed Career EditBarrister Edit Gaudron was admitted to the New South Wales Bar in October 1968 after having completed her articles of clerkship and commenced practice as a barrister She attempted to buy a room for herself in one of the barristers chambers in Sydney but was regularly knocked back because she was a woman When future High Court colleague Michael McHugh attempted to sell his room the other members of his chambers would not let Gaudron buy it although there were no other buyers 1 She eventually shared a room with Janet Coombs another pioneering female barrister 2 Gaudron regularly argued before the Supreme Court of New South Wales and the High Court in the early 1970s particularly in the area of industrial law In 1972 she became the first woman to be appointed to the Council of the New South Wales Bar citation needed Gaudron s first major breakthrough was in 1970 with O Shaughnessy v Mirror Newspapers Ltd 4 where as a 27 year old junior counsel she successfully argued the matter single handedly before the High Court after the plaintiff Peter O Shaughnessy sacked his senior counsel Clive Evatt QC preferring her ability over the veteran According to O Shaughnessy she cut a valiant figure this slip of a girl who stood unsupported before the five legal elders of the land They were obviously impressed by her courage her sheer elegant dash her shining intellect finding expression in felicitous language her good manners charm poise And perhaps when all is said and done by her sheer cheek in taking on the case 5 Another one of Gaudron s significant cases was in 1972 when she successfully argued the Equal Pay case for the Whitlam Labor government before the Conciliation and Arbitration Commission 6 Early in 1972 Gaudron had entered a bar with a male barrister friend when the waitress informed the friend that the bar did not serve women Gaudron patiently explained to the barmaid that my friend didn t want a woman because he d brought his own eventually creating something of a scene which attracted the attention of Labor politician Clyde Cameron who said that he didn t realise such sexual discrimination still existed Gaudron said that the discrimination being practised in that particular hotel was nothing compared to the discrimination over which he would undoubtedly preside when he became Minister for Industrial Relations after the next election 1 However the Whitlam government was elected on 2 December and Cameron duly became Minister for Industrial Relations Whitlam called Gaudron on 3 December to hire her to argue the case for equal pay citation needed The case begun by the Australian Council of Trade Unions and supported by the Whitlam government extended the reach of the original but limited equal pay decision of 1969 Prior decisions had guaranteed equal pay only for certain specific occupations and later certain limited industries industries traditionally considered women s work such as the textile industry whereas this case extended the principle of equal pay to all workers Gaudron s argument was based on the principles of the 1951 Equal Remuneration Convention of the International Labour Organization an organisation she would later work for However Gaudron later came to regard her argument that Australia had not ratified the Convention because the commission would not grant equal pay thus preventing Australia from fulfilling its obligations under the convention as somewhat disingenuous and recalled it with a measure of embarrassment 1 Conciliation and Arbitration Commission Edit In April 1974 Gaudron was appointed to the Conciliation and Arbitration Commission as Deputy President becoming the youngest ever federal judge It was rumoured that Cameron had advocated in Cabinet for her appointment first by emphasising her outstanding academic record then by noting her humble working class background to which Whitlam supposedly said Next you ll be telling us she was born in a bloody manger 7 Gaudron s most notable case on the Arbitration Commission was an important test case for maternity leave in 1979 which laid down award standards allowing for a year s unpaid leave for all full time and permanent part time workers 8 In 1979 1980 Gaudron was the inaugural chair of the NSW Legal Services Commission Gaudron held the position of Deputy President until her resignation in May 1980 9 Lecturer QC and Solicitor General Edit Gaudron lectured at the University of New South Wales law school for a brief time then in February 1981 she was appointed the Solicitor General of New South Wales the first female Solicitor General in any Australian jurisdiction That same year she was made a Queen s Counsel QC the first female QC in New South Wales In her capacity as Solicitor General Gaudron argued for New South Wales in such landmark High Court cases as the Tasmanian Dams case From 1981 to 1986 she served on the Council of Macquarie University and from 1984 to 1986 chaired an advisory council at the University of Wollongong 7 High Court Justice Edit The death of Justice Lionel Murphy in October 1986 and the retirement of Chief Justice Harry Gibbs in February 1987 created two vacancies on the High Court On 6 February 1987 10 John Toohey and Gaudron were appointed to the court At just 44 years of age Gaudron was the fourth youngest Justice after Evatt McTiernan and Dixon as well as the first female Justice 11 As a High Court Justice Gaudron contributed to every area of Australian law most notably to Australian criminal law in judgments that combine technical mastery with a general tendency to insist on strict compliance by trial judges with their obligations in directing juries 2 Gaudron was part of the progressive Mason and Brennan courts which decided such influential cases as Cole v Whitfield 12 Dietrich v The Queen 13 and the Mabo case 14 Gaudron was consistently opposed to all forms of discrimination with notable judgments in this vein including the decision in Street v Queensland Bar Association on Section 117 of the Constitution of Australia 15 and her joint judgment with Justice McHugh in Castlemaine Tooheys Ltd v South Australia 2 16 Gaudron was generally regarded as not particularly emotive in her writing style although the judgment for which she is perhaps best remembered popularly was the Mabo case where in a joint judgment with Justice Deane she said that Australia s past treatment of Indigenous Australians was the darkest aspect of the history of this nation 14 The award of Companion of the Order of Australia AC was made to six of the seven serving High Court justices in the Bicentennial Australia Day Honours of 1988 17 Gaudron had declined the award without explanation 7 On 19 September 1997 Gaudron was appointed the founding Patron of Australian Women Lawyers and continued in this role until 20 February 2009 18 Retirement Edit On 21 June 2002 Gaudron announced her retirement from the High Court effective from 10 February 2003 She left the court at the age of just 60 ten years before she reached the mandatory retirement age Gaudron s early retirement was lamented by all areas of the legal profession Justice Michael Kirby who was a close friend of Gaudron has stated many times that her absence left the court with a different character and turned it into a more blokey place 19 In March 2003 Gaudron joined the International Labour Organization ILO in Geneva Switzerland In 2004 she was a member of an inquiry into trade union rights in Belarus 1 She was also appointed as a judge of the ILO s Administrative Tribunal From July 2011 she has been appointed as President of the Tribunal 20 Criticism EditGaudron has occasionally been criticised throughout her career At the time of her appointment to the High Court in 1987 the New South Wales legal magazine Justinian published anonymous remarks stating a melancholy catalogue of sins of omission and commission as well as the better claims of others ought to have weighed against her appointment 21 and that she held an emotional disposition inappropriate in a holder of judicial office 2 Jack Waterford in The Canberra Times observed that her appointment would likely be controversial as she was strongly identified with the Labor Party and despite a formidable career has not generally been regarded as in the front rank of the legal profession 22 When she announced her retirement an anonymous academic said that Gaudron had failed to achieve the expectations set by her supporters and that among the other High Court Justices Gaudron was erratic and certainly not among the court s greats 21 Another anonymous academic said that Gaudron s Labor connections had delivered her unearned promotions 21 Approbation EditDespite this anonymous criticism Gaudron also received much praise Former President of the New South Wales Bar Ruth McColl described Gaudron s contribution to Australian law as an extraordinarily humanising effect the strong views she expresses in cases involving discrimination and like issues are very influential and important in the development of the law in those areas 23 The Anti Discrimination Commissioner of Tasmania Jocelynne Scutt said that her contribution has been outstanding both as a jurist and as an advocate And it has been profoundly significant in terms of her being a woman too 21 Former Chief Justice Anthony Mason remarked that Gaudron s contribution just can t be described as symbolic but rather she had made a very significant and genuine contribution to Australian law 21 Gaudron described herself in 2005 as privileged to be a bit player in the maintenance of the rule of law in Australia 1 Family EditGaudron has two daughters Danielle and Julienne with her first husband Ben Nurse Danielle was born during her final year of Law School and Julienne was a baby at her appointment to the Arbitration Commission She also has a son Patrick with her second husband John Fogarty 7 24 See also EditFirst women lawyers around the worldReferences Edit a b c d e f g h Hon Mary Gaudron QC at the UNIFEM International Women s Day Breakfast Women Lawyers Association of South Australia Archived from the original on 29 September 2007 Retrieved 24 June 2006 a b c d e f Kalowski Henrik 2001 Gaudron Mary Genevieve In Blackshield Tony Coper Michael Williams eds The Oxford Companion to the High Court of Australia South Melbourne Victoria Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 554022 0 Burton Pamela 2010 From Moree to Mabo The Mary Gaudron Story Trans Pacific Press p 39 ISBN 9781742580982 O Shaughnessy v Mirror Newspapers Ltd Othello case 1970 HCA 52 1970 125 CLR 166 High Court Australia Official website of Peter O Shaughnessy Archived 2 January 2014 at the Wayback Machine peteroshaughnessy info accessed 29 September 2015 Burton Pamela 2010 From Moree to Mabo The Mary Gaudron Story University of Western Australia Press Perth a b c d McMurdo M A 2003 SPEECH PROPOSING A TOAST TO RETIRING JUSTICE MARY GAUDRON AUSTRALIAN WOMEN JUDGES DINNER PDF Queensland Courts Archived from the original PDF on 20 August 2006 Retrieved 26 June 2006 O Neill Steve Paid Maternity Leave Parliament of Australia Parliamentary Library Archived from the original on 29 April 2006 Retrieved 26 June 2006 Blackshield Tony Coper Michael Williams George 2001 The Oxford Companion to the High Court of Australia PDF Oxford University Press Australia Retrieved 4 February 2018 Justice Gaudron will retire today The Courier Mail 11 February 2003 p 7 Karp Paul 30 January 2017 Susan Kiefel becomes Australia s first female chief justice of the high court The Guardian Retrieved 5 February 2017 Cole v Whitfield 1988 HCA 18 1988 165 CLR 360 High Court Australia Dietrich v The Queen 1992 HCA 57 177 CLR 292 High Court Australia a b Mabo v Queensland No 2 1992 HCA 23 1992 175 CLR 1 3 June 1992 High Court Street v Queensland Bar Association 1989 HCA 53 168 CLR 461 High Court Australia Castlemaine Tooheys Ltd v South Australia 1990 HCA 1 1990 169 CLR 436 High Court Australia Six High Court judges head Australia Day honours in Canberra Times 26 January 1988 Our History Australian Women Lawyers Retrieved 4 February 2018 Attard Monica 16 November 2003 Sunday Profile Justice Michael Kirby Australian Broadcasting Corporation Archived from the original on 20 August 2006 ILO a b c d e Shiel Fergus 9 December 2002 A different kind of Justice The Age Australia Gaudron Toohey the two on High Court list The Canberra Times 5 December 1986 Carrick Damien 2003 Changing of the Guard at the High Court Radio National The Law Report Retrieved 26 June 2006 Lawson Valerie 23 March 2002 Two Silky Susans in line to do justice to court s gender agenda The Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 10 January 2014 Legal officesPreceded byGregory Sullivan Solicitor General for New South Wales1981 1987 Succeeded byKeith Mason Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mary Gaudron amp oldid 1127754118, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.