Thursday, January 06, 2005

 

Law and liberty both at risk

Vegetation management in Queensland – a Case of Constitutional Vandalism

Suri Ratnapala, Professor of Law and Director, Centre for Public, International and Comparative Law, T C Beirne School of Law, University of Queensland

Australia is called the Lucky Country but luck has played only a small part in the country’s success. The conversion of resources into wealth requires capital, technology, enterprise and hard work. People do not invest in wealth creating activity when the risks are too high and the returns too low. Risks increase when the law is unpredictable and property rights are insecure. The success of Australia’s primary industry sector owes much to the relative stability of property rights and contractual certainty secured by what the great Scottish philosopher David Hume called the ‘three fundamental laws concerning the stability of possessions, translation by consent and the performance of promises’ These laws are maintained by the strength of the constitution and the eternal vigilance of the people. Environmental regulation driven by Green politics threatens the rule of law and property rights. The flawed processes by which environmental policies are determined and enforced not only subvert constitutional principles but also admit bad science.
This essay examines the nature of the Green threat to the rule of law and hence property rights. It is impossible to survey within a brief note the complex and ever growing environmental regulatory regime in Australia. Hence I will focus my attention on one piece of legislation that typifies all that is wrong and dangerous about recent trends in environmental protection law in this country. The legislation I examine is Queensland’s Vegetation Management Act 1999 (VMA)

Tuesday, November 30, 2004

 

Rural Fencelines - another case of nimbyism

Branch cutting on boundaries is not an issue in the cities . How come farmers have to bear the brunt of more cuts to their territory?. Trees on roadsides already claim their height into our paddocks- and that's something farmers are happy to accept long term . Surely that long term commitment on landholders part should allow them to trim back the branches to the boundary , if the owner needs to protect his own territory and his own interests in the boundary fence itself . Not that complicated unless you believe animals have more rights than we do and as long as the issue is not one that affects your managemnet style on your boundary

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