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Browsing Publications by Subject "D - Canon Law"
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- PublicationCanons 705-707: The Membership of a Religious Bishop in His Religious Institute(Canon Law Society of America, 2015) Waters, Ian; Euart, Sharon; ,The ways in which a priest belonging to a religious institute who is ordained a bishop continues membership of the institute
- PublicationCatholic feminism: pain, prayer and paradox(NewSouth, 2012-09) Massam, Katharine; Lindsay, Elaine; Scarfe, JanetThe chapter traces the discussion of ordination of women within Australian Catholic feminism with a focus on the 1970s through to the 1990s. It highlights the work of Rosemary Goldie and the theological perspective of Thérèse of Lisieux alongside the development of the groups Ordination of Catholic Women and Women and the Australian Church. It explores the common hope for a renewal of priestly ministry, and the conviction that unites disparate Catholic opinion that the ordained priesthood for women is not a feminist end in itself, as the church is not an end in itself, but exists to enable God's mission, the transformation of the world.
- PublicationCatholics as Civil Marriage Celebrants(Canon Law Society of America, 2014) Waters, Ian; Euart, Sharon
- PublicationChurch tradition, authority, and pastoral decisions(Canon Law Society of Australia & New Zealand, 2018) Nagle, Cormac
- PublicationDiocesan Administrator and College of Consultors(Canon Law Society of America, 2014) Waters, Ian; Euart, Sharon
- PublicationDoes 'Evangelium vitae' 73 apply to assisted dying legislation?(2017) Corby, PaschalFollowing acts to legalise forms of assisted dying in other countries, the Australian state of Victoria is poised to do the same. In June last year, the Legal and Social Issues Committee of the Parliament of Victoria tabled the report resulting from its inquiry into end of life choices, which recommends the passing of laws that would make it legal for a terminally ill patient at the end of his or her life to ask a doctor to help him or her die. This proposal is currently before a ministerial advisory panel consisting of clinical, legal, health administration and palliative care experts, with the task of drafting a bill to be presented in parliament sometime later this year, to be decided by a conscience vote of its members.
- PublicationFundamental Rights in Administrative Decision-Making: Peremptory Norms as Objective Standards in Immigration and Refugee Cases(Presidian Legal Publishing, 2009) Glyn, Justin
- Publication“Innovations” during the Vacancy of a See(Canon Law Society of America, 2014) Waters, Ian; Euart, Sharon
- PublicationJustice: An Ignatian Perspective(Campion Hall, Oxford, 2012) Glyn, Justin
- PublicationLess than meets the eye: the Pontifical Secret and Analogous Provision(Canon Law Society of Australia & New Zealand, 2019) Glyn, Justin
- PublicationMembership of a Religious Bishop in his Religious Institute(Canon Law Society of America, 2015) Waters, Ian; Euart, Sharon
- PublicationNot Worth the Paper it’s Written On?’: Oral Singular Administrative Acts in Canon Law(Canon Law Society of Australia & New Zealand, 2018) Glyn, Justin
- PublicationThe Law of Secrecy in the Latin Church(Canon Law Society of Australia & New Zealand, 2016) Waters, Ian
- PublicationThe Ministry of a Laicised Priest(Canon Law Society of America, 2015) Waters, Ian; Euart, Sharon
- PublicationThe Plenary Council and Canon Law(2018) Waters, IanThe Australian hierarchy was established by Pope Gregory XVI in 1842. Since then, there have been six national Catholic councils held in Australia. The first two, celebrated in 1844 and 1869, are known as the First Provincial Council of Australia and the Second Provincial Council of Australia, as until 1874 the Australian dioceses were all in the one ecclesiastical province with Sydney being the sole metropolitan see. In 1874, a second province - Melbourne - was established, and the national councils since then - four of them, celebrated in 1885, 1895, 1905 and 1937 - have been called plenary councils, the term used in the Catholic Church in recent centuries for councils whose participants are from more than one ecclesiastical province; in the past, terms such as regional councils or national councils have been used. As we all know, another plenary council for Australia is planned to commence in 2020.
- PublicationThe Right to Administrative Justice in Religious Institutes(Saint Paul University, 2018) Glyn, JustinThis article examines the general canonical principles which are applicable to decision-making in religious institutes. After situating these decisions in canonical context, it considers the nature of the authority exercised by religious superiors and the application of the general principles of administrative law to decision-making in religious institutes. It then illustrates this application using two particular examples as paradigms of administrative decision making: the decision to grant or refuse temporary profession in a religious institute and the transfer of a religious from one house to another. Finally, it gives an overview of the potential remedies available to people who feel themselves aggrieved by a superior's decision.