Abstract

Alcohol Management Plans ('AMPs') are presently under review in Queensland and the Northern Territory, and the High Court is due to hand down a decision on their validity in Queensland. Against this background, this brief examines the differing views on AMPs as racist incursions into citizens' rights on the one hand, and their importance in saving communities from alcohol-fuelled violence on the other. It recognises this as a 'wicked problem' but suggests that there is a valid argument for retaining AMPs.

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