Legal Studies Q10 – Referendum Success Factors | VCE Units 3 & 4 Practice – StudyPulse
StudyPulse Sign up free

Legal Studies VCE Units 3 & 4 Practice Question 10 – Referendum Success Factors

Q10 Legal Studies Referendum Success Factors Unit 4 - AOS 2

Question 10

1 mark

In 2025, a referendum is proposed to constitutionally enshrine the principle of ‘equality of opportunity’ for all Australians. Prior to the vote, a significant split emerges within the governing political party, with some members publicly campaigning against the proposed change, citing concerns about potential unintended consequences for existing social programs. Which factor affecting referendum success is MOST directly undermined by this division?

Your Answer

A

Clarity and simplicity of the proposed change.

B

Bipartisan support.

C

Level of community engagement.

D

Adequacy of funding for the ‘yes’ campaign.

About This Legal Studies Question

This is a free VCE Units 3 & 4 Legal Studies practice question worth 1 mark, testing your understanding of Referendum Success Factors. It falls under The people and reform in Unit 4: The people, the law and reform. Submit your answer above to receive instant AI-powered marking and personalised feedback.

Subject
Legal Studies – Victorian Certificate of Education Units 3 & 4
Unit 4
The people, the law and reform
Area of Study 2
The people and reform
Key Knowledge
Referendum Success Factors

Unit 4 Overview

The study of Australia’s laws and legal system includes an understanding of institutions that make and reform our laws. In this unit, students explore how the Australian Constitution establishes the law-making powers of the Commonwealth and state parliaments, and how it protects the Australian people through structures that act as a check on parliament in law-making. Students develop an understanding of the significance of the High Court in protecting and interpreting the Australian Constitution. They investigate parliament and the courts, and the relationship between the two in law-making, and consider the roles of the individual, the media and law reform bodies in influencing changes to the law, and past and future constitutional reform. Throughout this unit, students apply legal reasoning and information to actual and/or hypothetical scenarios.

The people and reform

Laws should reflect the needs of society, but they can become outdated. Individuals and groups can actively participate to influence changes to laws, and law reform bodies (including the Victorian Law Reform Commission, parliamentary committees, and Royal Commissions) can investigate and make recommendations for change. Laws can be changed by parliament and the courts, while constitutional reform requires a referendum. In this area of study, students investigate the need for law reform and the means by which individuals and groups can influence changes to the law. Students draw on examples of individuals, groups and the media influencing law reform, as well as examples from the past four years of inquiries of law reform bodies. Students examine the relationship between the Australian people and the Australian Constitution, the reasons for and processes of constitutional reform, the 1967 referendum about First Nations people and the 2023 referendum about an Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Voice.

Key Knowledge Detail

factors affecting the success of a referendum

Want more Legal Studies practice questions?

StudyPulse has thousands of VCE Legal Studies questions with full AI feedback, mark breakdowns, progress tracking, and study notes across every Key Knowledge point including Referendum Success Factors.