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Invisible powers to punish: licensee barring order provisions in Victoria and South Australia

journal contribution
posted on 2019-01-01, 00:00 authored by Clare FarmerClare Farmer
Problems associated with excessive alcohol consumption have prompted a range of legislative, regulatory and operational responses. One provision empowers licensees, in Australian jurisdictions such as Victoria and South Australia, to formally exclude patrons from their venues and the surrounding public area.
The imposition of a licensee barring order requires no demonstrable offence to be committed. No proof needs to be documented and the ban takes effect immediately. Non-compliance is subject to police enforcement and possible criminal breach proceedings. The process through which a barring order may be challenged can be ambiguous and time-consuming, and the punishment is typically served regardless of the review outcome. Limited data is available to enable assessment of the way in which barring orders are used.
This paper examines how licensee barring orders extend to non-judicial and non-law enforcement officers an on-the-spot and pre-emptive power to punish. Yet, with no formal training, monitoring or meaningful oversight of their use, barring orders are open to abuse and constitute a summary power to punish that is opaque to scrutiny.

History

Journal

International journal for crime, justice & social democracy

Volume

8

Issue

1

Pagination

70 - 84

Publisher

Queensland University of Technology, Crime and Justice Research Centre

Location

Brisbane, Qld.

ISSN

2202-8005

eISSN

2202-8005

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2018, The Author