The Governor-General's Undergraduate Essay Competition is Australia's most prestigious civics essay competition. It is open to Australian undergraduate students (including LLB, JD and honours students) studying in all faculties at universities across Australia and includes questions that are related to law, politics and history.
This is the 7th year of the Competition, which awards up to $33,000 in cash prizes annually. The 2010 competition questions have now been released. The 2010 competition will close on Friday, 17 December 2010 at 5pm AEST.
Every year the competition is judged by a panel of distinguished individuals including a High Court Justice and prominent academics. This prestigious competition provides students with the opportunity to be further recognised for their academic skill, talent and research.
CEFA encourages students to visit this website regularly to review the latest updates regarding the competition. It can be accessed via www.essaycompetition.com.au
The contact person for the competition is CEFA Research Scholar Joel Williams. Joel can be contacted at jwilliams@cefa.org.au
The results of the 2009 Competition will be published following the finals judging of the essays in July of this year.
The winners of the 2008 Competition received their awards and prizes from the Governor-General of the Commonwealth of Australia, Her Excellency Ms Quentin Bryce AC, in September 2009. Full details of this event can be found here.
Mr Joshua Quinn-Watson, the winner of the 2008 Competition, recently said “CEFA's 2008 Governor-General's Essay Competition has been a significant moment in my academic life. Of particular pleasure was the opportunity to engage with a judging panel on which sat some of Australia's finest minds. As far as I am aware, no other student competition has panels of this calibre, and also allows students direct access to that panel. Thinking critically about the this country's national life is something from which students of every discipline stand to benefit, and I recommend that all interested students take advantage of this wonderful opportunity to discuss the national life with a group of people who do as much as anyone to shape it”.
More information here.
This is the 7th year of the Competition, which awards up to $33,000 in cash prizes annually. The 2010 competition questions have now been released. The 2010 competition will close on Friday, 17 December 2010 at 5pm AEST.
Every year the competition is judged by a panel of distinguished individuals including a High Court Justice and prominent academics. This prestigious competition provides students with the opportunity to be further recognised for their academic skill, talent and research.
CEFA encourages students to visit this website regularly to review the latest updates regarding the competition. It can be accessed via www.essaycompetition.com.au
The contact person for the competition is CEFA Research Scholar Joel Williams. Joel can be contacted at jwilliams@cefa.org.au
The results of the 2009 Competition will be published following the finals judging of the essays in July of this year.
The winners of the 2008 Competition received their awards and prizes from the Governor-General of the Commonwealth of Australia, Her Excellency Ms Quentin Bryce AC, in September 2009. Full details of this event can be found here.
Mr Joshua Quinn-Watson, the winner of the 2008 Competition, recently said “CEFA's 2008 Governor-General's Essay Competition has been a significant moment in my academic life. Of particular pleasure was the opportunity to engage with a judging panel on which sat some of Australia's finest minds. As far as I am aware, no other student competition has panels of this calibre, and also allows students direct access to that panel. Thinking critically about the this country's national life is something from which students of every discipline stand to benefit, and I recommend that all interested students take advantage of this wonderful opportunity to discuss the national life with a group of people who do as much as anyone to shape it”.
More information here.