Government Schemes for Extra-Judicial Compensation: an Assessment
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Authors
Lim, Sarah
Ng, Nathalie
Weeks, Greg
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Volume Title
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Australian Institute of Administrative Law
Abstract
Providing redress where loss has been suffered is not the sole preserve of the judiciary.
At least in part, this is because loss can be suffered by individuals in the absence of legal
liability. While this is not the exclusive province of public entities, it is more commonly
the case that ‘moral liability’ justifying the payment of compensation is borne by public
entities.1
For one thing, public entities generally have a much greater capacity to cause
individuals — even relatively sophisticated or commercially adept parties2
— to act in a
way that they otherwise might not. Government and other public figures come cloaked in
authority,3
with the consequence that people are more likely to comply with requests or
instructions. Such compliance will frequently not create a legal obligation if the individual
suffers loss. Compensation schemes are premised on the belief that the action might
nonetheless create moral obligations and that these can be a sufficient basis for
compensation to issue.
This article considers the provision of compensation outside the legal system, usually paid
on the basis of ‘moral liability’ rather than a claim founded in law. There are a number of
different schemes in place which may achieve this end, across every Australian jurisdiction
and they are both statutory and executive. Our consideration of those schemes forms part of
the article, the rest being given over to the assessment of whether and to what extent they
are successful in what they set out to do. Our conclusion on this point may be summarised
by saying that extrajudicial compensation has become an essential part of seeing that
justice is done in public law matters, particularly those which do not disclose a strong legal
basis but in which a party has undoubtedly suffered loss as a result of a public entity’s acts
or decisions.
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Australian Institute of Administrative Law Forum
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Restricted until
2099-12-31