constitution, while some can be from unwritten parts of the constitution. This
not be exaggerated. What, in reality, should guide constitutional discourse is
tution as a whole. From some case studies in the context of Korean constitu-
tional adjudication, this argument has been proved true. What is important
is that all the constitutional actors participating in constitutional dialogue
references, visible or invisible. At the same time, it is also noteworthy to rec-
ognize that they perform its constitutionally designated functions providently,
cators are not an exception to this proposition, but should be leading actors to
provide a role model for other actors.
343
Constitutional implications play a significant part in many important aspects
of Australian constitutional law. For instance, under the Boilermakers’ princi-
ple, the High Court has recognised an implication protecting the separation
of federal judicial power from non-judicial power; under the Kable principle
this has been extended to protect the institutional integrity of state courts.
The Court has recognised implied principles protecting states as bodies poli-
tic under the Melbourne Corporation doctrine, and the Commonwealth and
its powers under the Cigamatic doctrine. The Court has recognised implied
guarantees of freedom of political communication and universal access to the
franchise. Most recently, in the protection of the federal system and responsi-
ble government, the Court has articulated an extra-textual constitutional lim-
itation on the Commonwealth’s executive power to spend and contract in the
absence of explicit statutory authorisation.
Implications are thus critical to the shape of doctrines that protect funda-
mental constitutional structures in Australia – the separation of powers, feder-
alism, political democracy and responsible government – and are thus critical
to day-to-day government practice in a range of important policy areas. Yet,
outside of these protections for the structural features of the Constitution, in
the context of non-politically associated individual rights, Australian constitu-
tional culture remains deeply suspicious of most forms of implication. Our
conception of individual rights in this context is, of course, itself contestable:
on one view, a constitutional ‘right’ exists wherever the Court upholds an indi-
vidual’s constitutional claim.
1
The view we take, however, is that at least in this
context the concept of a constitutional right is best understood as referring to
1
See e.g., W. N. Hohfeld, ‘Fundamental Legal Conceptions: As Applies in Judicial Reasoning’
(1917) 26
Yale Law Journal 710. See also discussion in Frederick Schauer, ‘The Generality of
Rights’ (2000) 6 Legal Theory 323, 328.
12
Constitutional Implications in Australia
Explaining the Structure – Rights Dualism
Rosalind Dixon and Gabrielle Appleby