Overall the exam was a lot nicer than I had expected
Multiple Choice: I left the exam thinking that this was the hardest section of the exam, but apparently if all these answers are correct then I scored a 20/20!! I chose accident for Q18 as the syllabus specifically mandates what complete defences are; so self defence, necessity and insanity must be ruled out as they are outlined as being a complete defence. Meanwhile, the partial defences to murder don't specify what we need to learn. Even though we commonly just learn provocation and substantial impairment, we could technically be asked about every single partial defence that exists in the legal system. I don't know if accidents is actually a partial defence, but at the time I assumed that it must be due to process of elimination.
Short Answer: I think the trade unions question was the most tricky one here. I've only ever learnt the actual development of labour rights, but I didn't really delve into trade unionism and they're role in it. So I just hoped for the best and used the ILO as the main forum for the discussion of labour rights, as well as the Australian Labour Party. I then mentioned that they played and avid role in having labour rights enshrined in Article 23 and 24 of the UDHR (beats me if that's true or not). The common law one was a bit different, I employed my knowledge of crime here in Dietrich v The Queen and the establishment of the limited right to legal representation, in line with the ICCPR's right to a fair trial.
For my contemporary issue of human trafficking and slavery I have no clue how we're meant to fit 8 marks onto that single page. I had to use another booklet and noted that I've used another booklet below my response, since that's what my examiner told me to do. I'd say that ATARNotes was a god send specifically for this question, as everything I used was straight from the notes! I started off with international measures in the Trafficking Protocol 2000, but also mentioned how only 117/170 have actually ratified it, demonstrating ineffectiveness due to state sovereignty. I also said how Australia has enacted the treaty through the Criminal Code Amendment (TIP) 2005. My non legal measures were the UTS Anti Slavery Campaign and 'Trafficked' by SBS. Overall my final argument was that it's been partially effective due to state sovereignty and the fact that 27 mil are still enslaved, according to the ILO
Crime Essay: I got spooked when I first saw this question, so I left it to last so that I could get my brain jogging a bit. Key part for me was 'criminal justice system', so that gave me a springboard to go beyond bail. I just said that the struggle to balance community expectations with individual rights and freedoms is an issue that is prevalent throughout the criminal justice system, not just in the provision of bail or remand. P1 was on bail, P2 Mandatory sentencing, P3 Juries, P4 Provocation
World Order: Thank the lord for generic questions. I was going to do a at first, and started writing an intro for it. But then I realised if I answer b, that allows me to talk about he contemporary issues anyway and make a judgement about its effectiveness, in contrast to simply evaluating the generic statement. I felt that if I chose to do a, my essay would have been extremely repetitive. So yeah, did B P1 R2P, P2 Global Threats, P3 Regional Threats, P4 Conduct of Hostilities. I felt like my non legal responses were so weak here, which is why I felt like I HAD to use conduct of hostilities even though I hate it so much. It's just that the Red Cross has such a prevalent role there, so it was good to mention. I used an example from Religion and Peace in SOR2 for the nuclear threat lmao (Pax Christi). I reckon world order was my weakest section
Family: Absolutely loved both questions. I chose B as it was somewhat similar to what I had in my adjusted trial paper, and I scored well so I thought I'd give it a go. P1 Divorce, P2 Property, P3 Children, P4 Domestic Violence. My non-legal responses were again very weak here. I honestly had nothing for divorce and property, so I just used media as a means of promotion but that makes no sense for divorce haha. I didn't walk in to the exam with NGOs but for some reason during my children paragraph my mind started thinking about Dad's in Distress? I don't know if they exist or what they do but I used it anyway so hope that goes well. My non legal responses only really shined in the domestic violence paragraph, where I used the White Ribbon Campaign and Rosie Batty's Never Alone foundation. However, non-legal links throughout the essay weren't so strong so I hope the markers weren't expecting an exact 50/50 analysis!!
Tl;dr: fair exam, options were only weakened by a lack of non-legal measures
EDIT: I said common law for the tricky MC question. I don't know WHY that's the case but I recall a past HSC paper where the answer was common law. It's been catching me out for the entire year because I always think it's best upheld in statute law. So when I saw that in reading time I was like "this is not the time to make mistakes, put common law even though you don't know why"
EDIT 2: For anyone wondering, 2015 Q16 was "International human rights are best protected in NSW by", and the answer is common law. It isn't the exact same wording but it was close enough for me haha