What is the Rule of Law?
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The Rule of Law Wheel is a visual tool to explain the key principles that underpin a society governed by the rule of law. It breaks down complex legal ideas into four clear layers and helps students and the public understand how these elements work together to protect rights, limit power, and uphold justice.
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This video outlines the underlying elements of the rule of law as fairness, rationality, predictability, consistency, and impartiality, that are essential because they ensure that laws are applied justly and protect individual rights in a democratic society.
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Judge Culver of the District Court of NSW outlines the essential features of the rule of law and then illustrates what a society looks like without the rule of law in action.
Her Honour outlines a fictional case of an overseas tourist being given a package by a stranger. She looks at differing treatment by the police and courts depending on whether the country has the rule of law and how that impacts the accused’s access to justice.
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When any of the elements of the Rule of Law are weakened— whether through corruption, erosion of judicial independence, suppression of dissent, or exclusion of certain groups from the democratic process—the foundations of democracy begin to crumble. This erosion can destabilise democratic institutions, paving the way for authoritarianism, lawlessness, or dictatorial rule. This not only undermines public trust in government but also threatens the rights and freedoms that democracy is meant to protect.
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This poster forms part of the Informed Playing Card Project, showing that with the Rule of Law, all people are under the law.
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This poster shows how the rule of law provides the foundations for a stable economy by recognising and enforcing property rights with a motivated labour force, investment increase leading to economic growth
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This PowerPoint introduces teachers to the rule of law within the Year 11 Commerce and Legal Studies syllabuses, explaining the concept, its supporting principles, and why it matters in practice. It breaks down each principle using clear explanations, syllabus links, and a case‑based approach—showing how the Kristian White case illustrates the operation, fragility, and educational importance of the rule of law.
Related Resources
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This page explains the rule of law as the foundation of democracy, where government and citizens are equally bound by clear, fair laws. It highlights equality before the law, independent courts, checks and balances, and a culture of lawfulness that protects rights and prevents abuse of power.
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This activity resource guides students to analyse how rule of law principles operate in practice through the criminal case R v White, using structured tasks that test each spoke of the Rule of Law Wheel. It supports critical evaluation of equality before the law, judicial independence, accountability, human rights, and institutional checks and balances through case‑based discussion and extension questions.
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The Rule of Law Wheel is a visual tool to explain the key principles that underpin a society governed by the rule of law. It breaks down complex legal ideas into four clear layers and helps students and the public understand how these elements work together to protect rights, limit power, and uphold justice.
Explore Related Topics
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Equality Before the Law
Explore resources on equality before the law, including the Lost Parcel story, showing how legal rules apply fairly to all people, strengthening fairness in everyday situations.
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Presumption of Innocence
Explore resources on the presumption of innocence, showing how the burden of proof protects the accused and safeguards fairness in criminal justice.
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Independent and Impartial Judiciary
Explore resources on an independent and impartial judiciary, including the history of the Supreme Court & its role in delivering justice & strengthening trust in the judiciary.