you're wrong about 8 i think, tort is negligence. the floor was wet, he slipped, that's negligence on behalf of the shopping centre.
and fairly sure protesting is civil + political, my trial had a question like that and that was the answer
i don't think 13 is C because it says "the operation of atsi customary law" and the incorporation of their punishments isn't atsi customary law. so wouldn't it b B, the traditional practices regulating them?
and 15 is deffers A. that's what an injunction is.
this is what i got but yeah i'm fairly sure i got some wrong.
1) C
2) A
3) B
4) A (i think?)
5) D (i think?)
6) D (no fucking idea)
7) D
8) D
9) B (it's the only one that make sense, there was no discrimination according to the question)
10) A (yeah unsure again hahaha)
11) B (i hope that's...
so glad i read an exemplar section 1 this morning, had the exact 6 marker question in it woo.
crime was so fucking easy holy shit, so glad they asked that and not a criminal justice issue for the 12 marker.
family essay i kind of fucked, i did a) and although is was broad i kind of forgot...
yeah you couldn't be more wrong.
101000
B Education (Primary)
Australian Catholic University - Canberra (Signadou)
F/P
CSP 55.00
a vast majority are under 70.
you awful child!
yeah pretty good, lol the fuck up who accused me left early. useless shit, cheers for dragging us down! but yeah i should get around 50~ raw i think. i hope :(
"who the fuck walks in after just looking at a few quotes"
as in, who prepares for english by just looking at a few quotes and not rote memorising the techniques based around them and the idea you connect it to? such a waste of exam time if you have to do it in there
i don't believe people who say they don't memorise quotes and the techniques revolving around it, who the fuck walks in after just looking at a few quotes and forms it all while they're in there? talk about wasting valuble time
double jeopardy states that once you have been acquitted, you cannot be retried or found guilty right? and recidivism is reoffending.
distinguish between civil and common law systems