Abstract
The results of a study are presented into the extent to which property figured as a constitutional and political concept in the drafting of the Constitution at the Australasian Federal Conventions of the 1890s. The process by which the Constitution was drafted by the Australasian Federal Conventions in the 1890s is outlined and the striking ways in which property, as a political concept, influenced debate at the Conventions on constitutional provisions that do not themselves deal with property are discussed.
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