Abortion Protests and the Limits of Freedom of Political Communication: Clubb v Edwards; Preston v Avery
Abstract
Two cases currently before the High Court of Australia — Clubb v Edwards and Preston v Avery — raise the validity of state laws that seek to prohibit certain communication and protest outside abortion clinics. The laws are justified on the basis that they protect the ‘safety’, ‘dignity’, ‘well-being’ and ‘privacy’ of those seeking abortion services. The cases therefore pose the question of how these values are accommodated within the Australian system of representative and responsible government.
Downloads
Published
01-09-2018
How to Cite
Morris, S. and Stone, A. (2018) “Abortion Protests and the Limits of Freedom of Political Communication: Clubb v Edwards; Preston v Avery”, Sydney Law Review, 40(3), pp. 395–409. Available at: https://openjournals.library.sydney.edu.au/SLR/article/view/19703 (Accessed: 29 December 2025).