The department is organised into five groups, each headed by a Deputy Secretary. These Deputy Secretaries report to the Secretary who co-ordinates and devises departmental structure and policy. These five groups are: •
Australian Government Solicitor • Justice and Communities • National Security and Criminal Justice • Integrity and International • Enabling Services. The Attorney-General's Department is located at the Robert Garran Offices, 3-5 National Circuit,
Barton in the
Australian Capital Territory.
Departmental Secretary The permanent secretary of the Attorney-General's Department is the non-political public service head of the department. This role dates from federation, and the first incumbent, Sir Robert Garran, was the first (and for a time the only) public servant employed by the federal government. In that role, he was responsible for overseeing the first federal election and setting up the rest of the federal bureaucracy by transferring state government functions to the federal government. From 1916, when the position of
Solicitor-General of Australia was created as the second law officer and deputy of the Attorney-General, the permanent secretary served concurrently as Solicitor-General, until the two roles were separated in 1964. Under the Law Officers Act passed that year, the Solicitor-General's role was clarified as statutory counsel deputising for the Attorney-General, separate from the role of the permanent secretary. On the recommendation of the
Prime Minister, the
Governor-General has appointed the following individuals as Secretary of the department: ==Mission and outcomes==