Gunningham, Neil2018-11-292018-11-290313-0096http://hdl.handle.net/1885/152755The Australian Federal Government’s red tape reduction strategies and comparable initiatives to reduce regulatory burdens at state level1 (exemplified by Queensland’s claim to be ‘aggressively tackling overregulation’)2 have prompted renewed focus on the role of regulation. In particular, what type of regulation should most appropriately be invoked to address various economic and social challenges ‘[i]n every facet of life, from aged care to agriculture, schools to small business, visas to veterans’?3 Further, is it possible to substantially reduce the volume of such regulation without threatening the very social purposes that legislation was developed to protect?application/pdfTwo cheers for prescription? Lessons for the red tape reduction agenda20152018-11-29