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ADELAIDE LAW SCHOOL PROMOTION



 
 
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  #1  
Old September 30th 08, 04:21 AM posted to rec.sport.rugby.union,aus.politics,soc.culture.australian,sci.physics,sci.astro
[email protected]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1
Default ADELAIDE LAW SCHOOL PROMOTION

The University of Adelaide is one of a small group of institutions
which pioneered the teaching of law in the English tradition as a
university discipline in the nineteenth century. When legal studies
began on the North Terrace campus in April 1883 there was only one
other fully fledged law school in Australia. This was at the
University of Melbourne where law teaching began in the 1850's.
Melbourne's Faculty of Law, however, was not established until 1873.

The University of Sydney had established a law faculty in 1855. That
University undertook examining for degrees, including the LL.D. for
many years. But it was not until 1890, as a Sydney University
commemorative volume affirms, that the "Law School came into being"
and its first law professor was appointed. In contrast, Adelaide moved
at once to provide for the teaching of undergraduates.

A Bachelor of Laws degree was instituted. Non-degree students were
also permitted to undertake legal studies as a requirement for
admission to the local bar. One full-time teacher was appointed to
take charge of legal education. With this, Adelaide became the second
fully operational Law School in Australia; after Melbourne. Within 12
months, the University's Chancellor and Chief Justice of the Supreme
Court, Samuel Way, commented on its progress to William Hearn, the
Dean of the Faculty of Law at the University of Melbourne. As he
wrote: "Our new Law School is going on very well."

In many ways, it was a bold, innovative decision to establish a law
school at the University of Adelaide in 1883. There were few models to
guide Way and the others who worked with him to make the teaching of
English style law a university discipline in South Australia. There
were still firm adherents to the traditional view that universities
were not appropriate places for the study of the common law. In the
year that the Law School opened the noted English jurist, Sir
Frederick Pollock, remarked, more in sorrow than in anger, that the
systematic study of English law was followed by few and scorned by
others. Undeterred, in Adelaide, as in some other parts of the then
British Empire, members of the legal profession and local educators
joined together to bring legal studies into universities. In New
Zealand, university based legal studies had begun at Christchurch and
Otago in the 1870's.

Following continental tradition, law was firmly established as a
discipline in universities in Canada's province of Quebec, where
French law predominated. It was not until October 1883, however, that
the first students were admitted to a university law school in a
common law jurisdiction in Canada. This was at Dalhousie Law School in
Halifax, Nova Scotia.

Like most of its counterparts, even in larger richer places,
Australia's second law school was a small establishment for many
years. Legal education was maintained as a co-operative enterprise
between one full-time teacher and practising members of the legal
profession from 1883 through to 1950. On at least five occasions in
this period the Law School was able to maintain its programmes only by
relying upon members of the legal profession to take responsibility
for teaching all its courses. At one of these periods, during and
after the first world war, the profession was in sole charge of law
school affairs and teaching for more than four years.

The earliest classes were given in the rooms of university staff
members in the Mitchell building. The School stayed there for more
than 75 years. In time, a small suite of rooms on the first floor,
including a lecture room, professor's study and a high ceilinged
library provided the centre for legal studies for generations of law
students. A poorly lighted stairway overshadowed by a stained glass
window was the chief method of access.

By the late 1950's it was clear that the existing rooms provided for
the Law School would not cope much longer with the growing number of
students and planned full-time staff. For a time there was vigorous
debate on where the School should be located. For traditional and
other reasons some favoured the Law School taking over more of the
Mitchell building. Others, including the University administration,
sought to have the Law School transferred to elsewhere on the campus.
The debate was relatively short but not without touches of acrimony.
In the face of University expansion, in late 1959 the Law School was
moved to cramped and generally unsatisfactory quarters in a new
extension erected at the rear of the Barr Smith Library.

Despite the heavy cost of transferring the library and making other
arrangements this was a temporary expedient only, pending the
completion of what was planned to be law's permanent quarters in the
soon to be completed Napier complex. In 1964 the Law School moved
there. By then, and probably understandably, the administrators had
faltered in making effective provision for the unprecedented expansion
of the University. They agreed that a new, separate building for the
Law School should be built on the eastern extremity of the campus on
North Terrace. The Ligertwood Building was opened in 1967 to house the
Law School. It provided some of the best library facilities for law
students in Australia and a special Moot Court.

The departure of the Law School from the Mitchell building was more
than a move to a new physical location. It marked the passing of 75
years in which the total number of students seldom exceeded 100.
"Large" classes of 30 or 40 were replaced by groups of 100 in the 60's
and almost 200 in the 70's as the student population climbed. In 1949
the full-time teaching complement consisted of one person, Arthur Lang
Campbell. By 1960 there were eight full-time teachers on the staff.
Today there are 38 members of staff.

Former students are to be found in many fields throughout Australia
and practise law all over the world in places as far removed from each
other as London, Hong Kong, and Canada's Yukon Territory. Universities
elsewhere in Australia, Britain, Canada, Hong Kong and the United
States have full-time, permanent staff members who received their
undergraduate training at Adelaide.

While teaching has been the main activity of the Law School legal
scholarship has also been nurtured. Members of the full-time staff of
the School, part-time teachers and graduates have contributed to this
through the years. John Salmond, for example, who was professor from
1897-1905, and his immediate successors, Jethro Brown and Coleman
Phillipson, were scholars of international repute. A special
collection of books and other publications in the Law Library
evidences the considerable body of wide ranging contributions made to
legal writing by full-time members of the staff.

Part-time teachers and graduates, too, have been responsible for many
publications, books, articles and periodicals and not least in the
judgments they have delivered in superior courts. The Law School's
staff and graduates have also contributed to law reform activities
dating back at least to the beginning of the twentieth century. Since
then, and notably in recent times, members of the full-time teaching
staff and graduates have been active members of bodies such as the
Australian Law Reform Commission and the South Australian Law Reform
Committee.

The hub of much of the legal research carried on in South Australia in
the past 100 years has been the University's Law Library. In the past
25 years, particularly under the guidance of librarians Gwenda
Sargeant (later Fischer) and then Dick Finlay, it has grown from a
relatively small collection to the most significant body of legal
materials in the State. Over the years it has received some important
benefactions, including gifts from the University's first Registrar,
William Barlow, Sir Josiah Symon and a large bequest from one of its
most devoted part-time teachers for many years, Edward Warner Benham.
The Library is now designated the Salmond Library.

Today, Adelaide is one of Austrlia's premier law schools. The
aspirations which Way and others espoused for legal education in South
Australia have now been emulated and developed in these and other
places. In retrospect, however, without the strength of purpose and
dedication of the nineteenth century pioneers who sought to develop
legal education within Universities in Australia and elsewhere it is
difficult to believe that Adelaide and other law schools would have
found the measure of acceptance they have achieved in the second half
of the twentieth century. Without the active collaboration of the
practising legal profession and university educators, over a period of
many years, some law schools, including Adelaide, could not have
survived, at least in terms of providing an unbroken record of service
to legal education for a century or more.

By the same token, the establishment and growth of university based
legal education began with an acknowledgment that there were essential
differences between this and the system of legal training which
preceded it. As Way himself indicated in the discussions on the
proposal to found the Adelaide Law School, Universities aimed to help
provide the broader educational experiences which he and others
considered were necessary to provide an adequate training in the law.
Down the years, some of Australia's most noted law graduates have
echoed these sentiments, emphasising in the process how adequate
education in the law requires more than simply the development of
technical expertise.

For example, as the former Chief Justice of Australia, Sir John
Latham, once affirmed, basic technical training in the law does not
suffice to prepare lawyers for their service to the community. Lawyers
must, so he argued, also have "cultural equipment and a sense of
social responsibility". In similar vein, the late Sir Robert Menzies
once declared that a law school exists not only to teach municipal law
but "it endeavours to lay a foundation upon which can be based a true
conception of jurisprudence as a social force." The history of
Adelaide Law School suggests that in its teaching and research and in
the ongoing activities of its former students it has striven towards
such goals.

rosemary owens, rosemary, owens, bernadette richards, bernadette,
richards, susan bartie, susan, bartie, astroturf, astroturfing,
propoganda, marketing, adelaide law school, adelaide university,
university of adelaide, flinders university, unisa, university of
south australia, dean, law school, south australia, adelaide,
australia, worldwide, lecture, reader in law, education, educational
system, labor law, industrial law, globalizatino, regulation of work,
australian constitutional law, constitution, constitutional law,
research, writing, feminist, feminine, legal, theory, legal theory,
administrative law, contract law, legal system, anti-discrimination,
employment, honours, john howard, kevin rudd, english, drama, teacher,
drama teacher, english teacher, education officer, raaf, law,
university of adelaide, ethics centre of south australia, australian
research discovery grant, university human research ethics committee,
reproductive technology, judge's associate, research assistant,
federal court of australia, university of cambridge, european
competition law, intellectual property, comparative constitutional
public law, corporate law, equity, trade practices, private
international law, tom gray, justice tom gray, supreme court, supreme
court of south australia, tony abbott, piper alderman lawyers, justice
paul finn, paul finn, martin hinton, solicitor general, qc, chris
kourakis, jan martin, melissa perry, joanne staugas, simon stretton,
andrew stewart, julie von doussa, dick whitington, john williams,
pascale quester, alex reilly, david wright, andrew stewart, paul
babie, adrian bradbrook, judith gardam, ngaire naffine, andrew
stewart, john williams, john gava, jim hambrook, ian leader-elliott,
andrew ligertwood, alex reilly, paul babie, keith bennets, margaret
castles, chris finn, kathleen mcevoy, alex wawryk, david wright,
gabrielle appleby, susan bartie, pierre-jean bordahandy, richard
bullen, janey greene, laura grenfell, anne hewitt, cornelia koch,
suzanne lemire, allan perry, bernadette richards, matthew stubbs,
michael detmold, horst lucke, wilfrid prest, john bannon, john
emerson, matthew goode, john keeler, geoffrey lindell, martin hinton,
anthony moore, melissa perry, eibe riedel, geof stapledon, fotina
agalidis, cheryl shapman, moira groves, panita hirunboot, rowan
mitchell, sarah vujicic, corinne walding, allayne webster, LEXIS
NEXIS, LAW BOOK COMPANY (THOMSON LEGAL AND REGULATORY ASIA PACIFIC
LIMITED), THE LAW SOCIETY OF SOUTH AUSTRALIA, THE NATIONAL
ENVIRONMENTAL LAW ASSOCIATION (S.A. DIVISION), AMPLA (THE RESOURCES
AND ENERGY LAW ASSOCIATION), THOMSON PLAYFORD BARRISTERS AND
SOLICITORS, KELLY & CO. LAWYERS, JOHNSON WINTER & SLATTERY BARRISTERS
AND SOLICITORS, FINLAYSONS, ALLENS ARTHUR ROBINSON, THE JOHN BRAY LAW
CHAPTER OF THE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION INC., THE HON. JUSTICE TOM GRAY, THE
HON. JUSTICE JOHN PERRY, DR MELISSA PERRY QC, THE HON. JUSTICE DAVID
BLEBY, THE HON. JUSTICE MARGARET NYLAND, NICHOLLS GERVASI LAWYERS, THE
SOUTH AUSTRALIAN BAR ASSOCIATON INC., NORMAN WATERHOUSE LAWYERS,
HANSON CHAMBERS, ELLICE RUTH LUCKE, SPARKE HELMORE LAWYERS, LIPMAN
KARAS LAWYERS, LYNCH MEYER LAWYERS, FISHER JEFFRIES BARRISTERS &
SOLICITORS, STEVE RODER: HOWARD ZELLING CHAMBERS, COWELL CLARKE
COMMERCIAL LAWYERS, FOUNTAIN & BONIG SPECIALIST LAWYERS, EDMUND BARTON
CHAMBERS, A.I.L.A. (THE AUSTRALIAN INSURANCE LAW ASSOCIATION),
ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR JOHN KEELER, hannah tonkin, michelle jarvis,
letitia anderson, sarah callaghan, hon. gregory john crafter, emma
leske, joseph pairin, rowena white, brendan lim
  #2  
Old September 30th 08, 05:15 AM posted to rec.sport.rugby.union,aus.politics,soc.culture.australian,sci.physics,sci.astro
The Old Fellow
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2
Default ADELAIDE LAW SCHOOL PROMOTION

wrote:
The University of Adelaide is one of a small group of institutions
which pioneered the teaching of law in the English tradition as a
university discipline in the nineteenth century. When legal studies
began on the North Terrace campus in April 1883 there was only one
other fully fledged law school in Australia. This was at the
University of Melbourne where law teaching began in the 1850's.
Melbourne's Faculty of Law, however, was not established until 1873.

The University of Sydney had established a law faculty in 1855. That
University undertook examining for degrees, including the LL.D. for
many years. But it was not until 1890, as a Sydney University
commemorative volume affirms, that the "Law School came into being"
and its first law professor was appointed. In contrast, Adelaide moved
at once to provide for the teaching of undergraduates.

A Bachelor of Laws degree was instituted. Non-degree students were
also permitted to undertake legal studies as a requirement for
admission to the local bar. One full-time teacher was appointed to
take charge of legal education. With this, Adelaide became the second
fully operational Law School in Australia; after Melbourne. Within 12
months, the University's Chancellor and Chief Justice of the Supreme
Court, Samuel Way, commented on its progress to William Hearn, the
Dean of the Faculty of Law at the University of Melbourne. As he
wrote: "Our new Law School is going on very well."

In many ways, it was a bold, innovative decision to establish a law
school at the University of Adelaide in 1883. There were few models to
guide Way and the others who worked with him to make the teaching of
English style law a university discipline in South Australia. There
were still firm adherents to the traditional view that universities
were not appropriate places for the study of the common law. In the
year that the Law School opened the noted English jurist, Sir
Frederick Pollock, remarked, more in sorrow than in anger, that the
systematic study of English law was followed by few and scorned by
others. Undeterred, in Adelaide, as in some other parts of the then
British Empire, members of the legal profession and local educators
joined together to bring legal studies into universities. In New
Zealand, university based legal studies had begun at Christchurch and
Otago in the 1870's.

Following continental tradition, law was firmly established as a
discipline in universities in Canada's province of Quebec, where
French law predominated. It was not until October 1883, however, that
the first students were admitted to a university law school in a
common law jurisdiction in Canada. This was at Dalhousie Law School in
Halifax, Nova Scotia.

Like most of its counterparts, even in larger richer places,
Australia's second law school was a small establishment for many
years. Legal education was maintained as a co-operative enterprise
between one full-time teacher and practising members of the legal
profession from 1883 through to 1950. On at least five occasions in
this period the Law School was able to maintain its programmes only by
relying upon members of the legal profession to take responsibility
for teaching all its courses. At one of these periods, during and
after the first world war, the profession was in sole charge of law
school affairs and teaching for more than four years.

The earliest classes were given in the rooms of university staff
members in the Mitchell building. The School stayed there for more
than 75 years. In time, a small suite of rooms on the first floor,
including a lecture room, professor's study and a high ceilinged
library provided the centre for legal studies for generations of law
students. A poorly lighted stairway overshadowed by a stained glass
window was the chief method of access.

By the late 1950's it was clear that the existing rooms provided for
the Law School would not cope much longer with the growing number of
students and planned full-time staff. For a time there was vigorous
debate on where the School should be located. For traditional and
other reasons some favoured the Law School taking over more of the
Mitchell building. Others, including the University administration,
sought to have the Law School transferred to elsewhere on the campus.
The debate was relatively short but not without touches of acrimony.
In the face of University expansion, in late 1959 the Law School was
moved to cramped and generally unsatisfactory quarters in a new
extension erected at the rear of the Barr Smith Library.

Despite the heavy cost of transferring the library and making other
arrangements this was a temporary expedient only, pending the
completion of what was planned to be law's permanent quarters in the
soon to be completed Napier complex. In 1964 the Law School moved
there. By then, and probably understandably, the administrators had
faltered in making effective provision for the unprecedented expansion
of the University. They agreed that a new, separate building for the
Law School should be built on the eastern extremity of the campus on
North Terrace. The Ligertwood Building was opened in 1967 to house the
Law School. It provided some of the best library facilities for law
students in Australia and a special Moot Court.

The departure of the Law School from the Mitchell building was more
than a move to a new physical location. It marked the passing of 75
years in which the total number of students seldom exceeded 100.
"Large" classes of 30 or 40 were replaced by groups of 100 in the 60's
and almost 200 in the 70's as the student population climbed. In 1949
the full-time teaching complement consisted of one person, Arthur Lang
Campbell. By 1960 there were eight full-time teachers on the staff.
Today there are 38 members of staff.

Former students are to be found in many fields throughout Australia
and practise law all over the world in places as far removed from each
other as London, Hong Kong, and Canada's Yukon Territory. Universities
elsewhere in Australia, Britain, Canada, Hong Kong and the United
States have full-time, permanent staff members who received their
undergraduate training at Adelaide.

While teaching has been the main activity of the Law School legal
scholarship has also been nurtured. Members of the full-time staff of
the School, part-time teachers and graduates have contributed to this
through the years. John Salmond, for example, who was professor from
1897-1905, and his immediate successors, Jethro Brown and Coleman
Phillipson, were scholars of international repute. A special
collection of books and other publications in the Law Library
evidences the considerable body of wide ranging contributions made to
legal writing by full-time members of the staff.

Part-time teachers and graduates, too, have been responsible for many
publications, books, articles and periodicals and not least in the
judgments they have delivered in superior courts. The Law School's
staff and graduates have also contributed to law reform activities
dating back at least to the beginning of the twentieth century. Since
then, and notably in recent times, members of the full-time teaching
staff and graduates have been active members of bodies such as the
Australian Law Reform Commission and the South Australian Law Reform
Committee.

The hub of much of the legal research carried on in South Australia in
the past 100 years has been the University's Law Library. In the past
25 years, particularly under the guidance of librarians Gwenda
Sargeant (later Fischer) and then Dick Finlay, it has grown from a
relatively small collection to the most significant body of legal
materials in the State. Over the years it has received some important
benefactions, including gifts from the University's first Registrar,
William Barlow, Sir Josiah Symon and a large bequest from one of its
most devoted part-time teachers for many years, Edward Warner Benham.
The Library is now designated the Salmond Library.

Today, Adelaide is one of Austrlia's premier law schools. The
aspirations which Way and others espoused for legal education in South
Australia have now been emulated and developed in these and other
places. In retrospect, however, without the strength of purpose and
dedication of the nineteenth century pioneers who sought to develop
legal education within Universities in Australia and elsewhere it is
difficult to believe that Adelaide and other law schools would have
found the measure of acceptance they have achieved in the second half
of the twentieth century. Without the active collaboration of the
practising legal profession and university educators, over a period of
many years, some law schools, including Adelaide, could not have
survived, at least in terms of providing an unbroken record of service
to legal education for a century or more.

By the same token, the establishment and growth of university based
legal education began with an acknowledgment that there were essential
differences between this and the system of legal training which
preceded it. As Way himself indicated in the discussions on the
proposal to found the Adelaide Law School, Universities aimed to help
provide the broader educational experiences which he and others
considered were necessary to provide an adequate training in the law.
Down the years, some of Australia's most noted law graduates have
echoed these sentiments, emphasising in the process how adequate
education in the law requires more than simply the development of
technical expertise.

For example, as the former Chief Justice of Australia, Sir John
Latham, once affirmed, basic technical training in the law does not
suffice to prepare lawyers for their service to the community. Lawyers
must, so he argued, also have "cultural equipment and a sense of
social responsibility". In similar vein, the late Sir Robert Menzies
once declared that a law school exists not only to teach municipal law
but "it endeavours to lay a foundation upon which can be based a true
conception of jurisprudence as a social force." The history of
Adelaide Law School suggests that in its teaching and research and in
the ongoing activities of its former students it has striven towards
such goals.

rosemary owens, rosemary, owens, bernadette richards, bernadette,
richards, susan bartie, susan, bartie, astroturf, astroturfing,
propoganda, marketing, adelaide law school, adelaide university,
university of adelaide, flinders university, unisa, university of
south australia, dean, law school, south australia, adelaide,
australia, worldwide, lecture, reader in law, education, educational
system, labor law, industrial law, globalizatino, regulation of work,
australian constitutional law, constitution, constitutional law,
research, writing, feminist, feminine, legal, theory, legal theory,
administrative law, contract law, legal system, anti-discrimination,
employment, honours, john howard, kevin rudd, english, drama, teacher,
drama teacher, english teacher, education officer, raaf, law,
university of adelaide, ethics centre of south australia, australian
research discovery grant, university human research ethics committee,
reproductive technology, judge's associate, research assistant,
federal court of australia, university of cambridge, european
competition law, intellectual property, comparative constitutional
public law, corporate law, equity, trade practices, private
international law, tom gray, justice tom gray, supreme court, supreme
court of south australia, tony abbott, piper alderman lawyers, justice
paul finn, paul finn, martin hinton, solicitor general, qc, chris
kourakis, jan martin, melissa perry, joanne staugas, simon stretton,
andrew stewart, julie von doussa, dick whitington, john williams,
pascale quester, alex reilly, david wright, andrew stewart, paul
babie, adrian bradbrook, judith gardam, ngaire naffine, andrew
stewart, john williams, john gava, jim hambrook, ian leader-elliott,
andrew ligertwood, alex reilly, paul babie, keith bennets, margaret
castles, chris finn, kathleen mcevoy, alex wawryk, david wright,
gabrielle appleby, susan bartie, pierre-jean bordahandy, richard
bullen, janey greene, laura grenfell, anne hewitt, cornelia koch,
suzanne lemire, allan perry, bernadette richards, matthew stubbs,
michael detmold, horst lucke, wilfrid prest, john bannon, john
emerson, matthew goode, john keeler, geoffrey lindell, martin hinton,
anthony moore, melissa perry, eibe riedel, geof stapledon, fotina
agalidis, cheryl shapman, moira groves, panita hirunboot, rowan
mitchell, sarah vujicic, corinne walding, allayne webster, LEXIS
NEXIS, LAW BOOK COMPANY (THOMSON LEGAL AND REGULATORY ASIA PACIFIC
LIMITED), THE LAW SOCIETY OF SOUTH AUSTRALIA, THE NATIONAL
ENVIRONMENTAL LAW ASSOCIATION (S.A. DIVISION), AMPLA (THE RESOURCES
AND ENERGY LAW ASSOCIATION), THOMSON PLAYFORD BARRISTERS AND
SOLICITORS, KELLY & CO. LAWYERS, JOHNSON WINTER & SLATTERY BARRISTERS
AND SOLICITORS, FINLAYSONS, ALLENS ARTHUR ROBINSON, THE JOHN BRAY LAW
CHAPTER OF THE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION INC., THE HON. JUSTICE TOM GRAY, THE
HON. JUSTICE JOHN PERRY, DR MELISSA PERRY QC, THE HON. JUSTICE DAVID
BLEBY, THE HON. JUSTICE MARGARET NYLAND, NICHOLLS GERVASI LAWYERS, THE
SOUTH AUSTRALIAN BAR ASSOCIATON INC., NORMAN WATERHOUSE LAWYERS,
HANSON CHAMBERS, ELLICE RUTH LUCKE, SPARKE HELMORE LAWYERS, LIPMAN
KARAS LAWYERS, LYNCH MEYER LAWYERS, FISHER JEFFRIES BARRISTERS &
SOLICITORS, STEVE RODER: HOWARD ZELLING CHAMBERS, COWELL CLARKE
COMMERCIAL LAWYERS, FOUNTAIN & BONIG SPECIALIST LAWYERS, EDMUND BARTON
CHAMBERS, A.I.L.A. (THE AUSTRALIAN INSURANCE LAW ASSOCIATION),
ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR JOHN KEELER, hannah tonkin, michelle jarvis,
letitia anderson, sarah callaghan, hon. gregory john crafter, emma
leske, joseph pairin, rowena white, brendan lim


We all know that South Australia is so devoid of any current
intelligence and they are targeting NZ in an attempt to increase their
IQ by recruiting the NZ workforce - hell's teeth even their Premier is a
Kiwi.
  #3  
Old September 30th 08, 05:15 AM posted to rec.sport.rugby.union,aus.politics,soc.culture.australian,sci.physics,sci.astro
Calvin[_4_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2
Default ADELAIDE LAW SCHOOL PROMOTION

On Tue, 30 Sep 2008 13:21:08 +1000,
wrote:

The University of Adelaide is one of a small group of institutions


[snip]

They're in more trouble than I realised...

--

cheers,
calvin
 




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