Classification as a Technique of Jurisdiction: Categories of Tree Protection in New South Wales’ Legal History

Publication Type:
Thesis
Issue Date:
2019
Full metadata record
The central concern of this thesis is to investigate classification as a technique of jurisdiction. It explores how law’s classification practices draw entities (persons, objects, places and events) within the domain of law’s authority, thereby establishing relations of belonging to law. These broad concerns are examined in the context of the common law, specifically the history and current practices of tree protection laws in New South Wales (‘NSW’). The research is guided by the following question: how does law classify protected trees? To answer this question, the thesis works through and extends the resources offered by the jurisprudence of jurisdiction, an area of jurisprudence concerned with how lawful relations are established and maintained as a matter of technique and practice. Drawing on archival and other historical sources, the thesis traces how different institutions have classified law’s protected trees in NSW since 1787. The findings are presented across three registers: who, how and effects. As a preliminary matter, sources of authority to classify law’s protected trees are discussed. The first register, 𝑤ℎ𝑜, then offers an account of the land-granting practices of the early NSW governors, who first exercised the authority to classify law’s protected trees in the colony. The second register, ℎ𝑜𝑤, considers techniques of classification. It explores how the NSW governors exercise the authority to make law’s categories by writing. This register also considers how the NSW courts sort trees into law’s categories by naming. The third register, 𝑒𝑓𝑓𝑒𝑐𝑡𝑠, contemplates how different categories of tree protection offer different qualities of belonging to law, bringing trees to law in different forms. Overall, the thesis contributes to the jurisprudence of jurisdiction and to the history of tree protection laws in NSW. Both contributions – to jurisprudence and to trees – support the overall argument that such a jurisprudence of classification offers important insights into how entities come to belong to law and the quality of that belonging.
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