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University of New South Wales Faculty of Law Research Series |
Last Updated: 25 July 2012
Commonwealth Power Over Higher Education
George Williams, University of New South Wales
Sangeetha Pillai,University of New South Wales (UNSW)
This
paper is available for download at
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2116794
Citation
This article was published at [2011] UQLawJl 16; 30 University of Queensland Law Journal 287-303. This paper may also be referenced as [2012] UNSWLRS 24.
Abstract
The regulation of higher education in Australia is
undergoing major change, with a largely State-based system being forced to make
way for a new national scheme. To this end, in June 2011, the Tertiary Education
Quality and Standards Agency Act 2011 (‘TEQSA Act’) was passed by
Federal Parliament. It establishes the Tertiary Education Quality and Standards
Agency (‘TEQSA’)
– a new and independent national regulatory
body responsible for oversight of the higher education sector.
TEQSA
marks the first step of a ten year federal reform agenda for higher education
and research designed to ‘boost Australia’s
national productivity
and performance as a knowledge-based economy’. The Commonwealth decided to
increase its regulatory footprint
following the 2008 Review of Higher Education
by Professor Denise Bradley. The Review found that significant structural
reforms to
the financing and regulatory framework of the sector were required in
order for Australia to compete globally.
This shift raises important
constitutional questions as to the extent to which the Commonwealth can impose a
new scheme of regulation
on the higher education sector, and universities in
particular. In 2006, Professor Greg Craven reached four broad conclusions about
the scope of Commonwealth power in this field:
(i) the Commonwealth
enjoyed ‘significant direct constitutional power over the area of higher
education’;
(ii) the Commonwealth had power to indirectly
‘influence and form higher education policy’, primarily through the
‘conditional
funding of universities’;
(iii) notwithstanding
these conclusions, the Commonwealth lacked the ‘cohesive constitutional
power necessary to regulate the
higher education sector in any comprehensive
way’; and
(iv) as a practical matter, ‘any genuine attempt at
national higher education legislation or regulation by the Commonwealth
would
... have to be based upon a significant degree of cooperation with the
States’.
Five years later, these conclusions are worthy of
reconsideration. Craven’s analysis predates the High Court decisions in
New
South Wales v Commonwealth (Work Choices Case), which applied a broad
interpretation of the Commonwealth’s corporations power
in s 51(xx) of the
Constitution, and Pape v Commissioner of Taxation (‘Pape’), which
upset the previously assumed view that the federal appropriations
power in s 81
could be applied to spend money on any topic whatsoever.
The TEQSA Act
relies primarily upon the corporations power, and so in this article we focus on
the decision in the Work Choices Case,
and the scope that the Commonwealth now
has under s 51(xx) to enact legislation for the higher education sector, and
universities
in particular. We address this issue after outlining the relevant
history of the regulation of higher education in Australia.
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URL: http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/journals/UNSWLRS/2012/24.html