On 10 February 2003, Justice Mary Gaudron sat for the last time on the High Court of Australia. After that, ‘[s]he was again just Mary Gaudron, QC’. Yet her life before her work on the High Court bench, and indeed after it, is worthy of documenting and commenting upon. Pamela Burton has done so in this illuminating judicial biography, especially noteworthy and welcomed in an area in which legal scholarship and writing generally is (currently) sorely lacking.
Mary Gaudron QC was the first woman appointed to the High Court of Australia in 1987. Yet she had a long, distinguished and interesting history before her appointment. It is not only her positions as the first female Solicitor-General appointed in Australia (as Solicitor-General for New South Wales) and of her time on the Australian Conciliation and Arbitration Commission that are also noteworthy. Indeed, it is the life of not only an extraordinary Australian that is chronicled in this biography but a fascinating insight into a judicial life that seeks to draw the threads between her personal and professional life.
Of particular interest to readers may be her struggles throughout her life as a female in the law, her time and eventual resignation from Australian Conciliation and Arbitration Commission and a considered and detailed look at not only some major cases during her time on the court as part of both the Mason, Brennan and Gleeson court but also of some of the finer, more subtle points not only of the cases but also of the inner workings of the court.
This biography is not authorised in the sense that Mary Gaudron QC was not interviewed or assist in it. Yet the depth of the research, including many references to interviews and discussions with those who either know her or were involved in her work, mean that this book rightly sits amongst the important Australia judicial biographies. There is much to interest, enjoy and even learn from this book, with both the law minded and the more general lay reader able to appreciate and honour this judicial life.