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  1. edwardf316

    Please help with total war essay

    Why bother, you'll never have to write an essay on WW1. Just stick to practicing source based questions
  2. edwardf316

    how to do well in history extension?

    Read about the historians you study in class and organise any summaries you make about them so they follow the key questions from the syllabus (YOU NEED TO KNOW THE SYLLABUS) • Who are the historians? • What are the aims and purposes of history? • How has history been constructed and recorded...
  3. edwardf316

    B6 Cut off

    Its never that high, even if it was a relatively easy exam
  4. edwardf316

    Help! How to search for History project topics?

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Historiography_of_the_French_Revolution This page outlines a lot of historians and what they say about the French Revolution. I ceebs reading it all so i'll leave that with you. Look at 4 or 5 different historians preferably from different schools of thought and see...
  5. edwardf316

    Section I: Multiple Choice

    This is from the Cambridge textbook "Dietrich v The Queen (1992), which for the first time established a limited right to legal representation in Australia"
  6. edwardf316

    Section I: Multiple Choice

    yep :)
  7. edwardf316

    B6 Cut off

    Yep
  8. edwardf316

    Section I: Multiple Choice

    Don't sweat it. It's only one part of the exam
  9. edwardf316

    Section I: Multiple Choice

    Its B. Read the answer in full, yes its says statutory but the response is in regards to legislation
  10. edwardf316

    B6 Cut off

    I don't think it will ever be that high. Probably somewhere between 82-85
  11. edwardf316

    Section I: Multiple Choice

    Pretty sure its D because it can be given by family member and not necessarily the victim
  12. edwardf316

    Section I: Multiple Choice

    "A" doesn't define legal representation though. You don't have the right to it, you can apply for it but it's not guaranteed that Legal Aid will represent you
  13. edwardf316

    Section I: Multiple Choice

    Yeah but the UDHR is soft law and not enforceable. I don't see how it could be any of the others because otherwise Dietrich v The Queen wouldn't have any significance
  14. edwardf316

    Section I: Multiple Choice

    It would be much simpler if you just read through the post. I was under the impression that if the offence is indictable like murder it had to be heard before a jury. When Cleverusername replied telling me it was lowered to manslaughter i was just clarifying that i thought manslaughter was also...
  15. edwardf316

    Section I: Multiple Choice

    I was referring to Q20
  16. edwardf316

    Section I: Multiple Choice

    I'm not 100% sure but i was under the impression manslaughter is still an indictable offence
  17. edwardf316

    Section I: Multiple Choice

    For one i would assume her "limited ability to understand events" would significantly lower the sentence. Also Murder is an indictable offence and therefore would have to be heard before a jury. Murder can only be heard in the Supreme Court, so its C. And 18 is is definitely C. For starters...
  18. edwardf316

    General Thoughts: Legal Studies

    If you wrote about it that's fine because it is part of the investigation process
  19. edwardf316

    General Thoughts: Legal Studies

    Police discretion has nothing to do with the sentencing and punishment process. They are two different parts of the syllabus and don't actually overlap at all
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