The common law “punitive” privileges against self-incrimination and exposure to a penalty have received renewed attention in a series of decisions concerning their application in such highly visible and sensitive contexts as Royal Commissions of Inquiry; investigation of corporate crime; police misconduct and economic regulation. Possibly less dramatic but no less fundamentally at issue is their application to the wider spectrum of rights and interests arising from, and affected by, the extensive administrative and discretionary powers in the hands of the executive and government officials.
Central to “this fertile new province of the law” is the Administrative Appeals Tribunal (henceforth referred to as the “Tribunal”). This appeal mechanism has been established at the Commonwealth level for the purpose of reviewing on the merits, decisions of administrators and thereby promoting fair and equitable decision-making principles.