Abstract
Recently, attention has been drawn to the proliferation in Australia of statutory authorities, which appear to be, to some extent, independent of government control. The Australian Constitution requires responsible government, and this article attempts to determine the extent to which the Constitution permits the establishment of statutory authorities outside the traditional organisational structure of ministerial departments of state, and to what extent such authorities may be independent of ministerial and parliamentary control. On the assumption that responsible government requires some measure of accountability of all parts of the executive government of the Commonwealth, the article examines the extent to which statutory authorities are accountable in accordance with the provisions of the Constitution, and also whether any other areas of law, especially administrative law, may provide some measure of accountability of statutory authorities.

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