The scale of the injustice inflicted upon the Chagossians by the United Kingdom is self-evident, but their legal route to redress has proven opaque and fraught with difficulty, as illustrated by the House of Lords’ majority decision in R (Bancoult) v Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs (No 2) [2008] UKHL 61; [2009] 1 AC 453. This disconnect is, nonetheless, inherent in the UK’s constitutional order. Constitutions outline the operation of governance orders, with constitutionalism injecting substantive principles into this picture, developing the relationship between the holders of power and those subject to its exercise. But not all constitutionalising projects are devoted to the same ends. The legal saga of the Chagossia...
The essay begins with an exploration of how Henry Neville's fictional Isle of Pines (1668) plays thr...
Constitutionalism is characterised by tensions and ambiguities. The Westminster constitutional frame...
The doctrine of parliamentary sovereignty in the United Kingdom may be alive but it is not exactly w...
Good governance requires the accommodation of multiple interests in the cause of decision making. Ho...
The British Indian Ocean Territory’s (BIOT) establishment in the 1960s exemplifies the UK’s efforts ...
This article argues that despite the UK Government’s exaltations of self-determination of its Overse...
Abstract In its Chagos Advisory Opinion, the International Court of Justice (ICJ) ruled that the UK'...
This article argues that despite the UK Government’s exaltations of self-determination of its Overse...
Comparative constitutional law is prone to two types of error. ‘Thin’ or overly formal accounts over...
The British Empire is treated as a historical phenomenon, but it enjoys a residual existence in the ...
This book offers a detailed account of the legal issues concerning the British Indian Ocean Territor...
One way of understanding the exile of the Chagos Islanders and their inability to return to their an...
This essay will explore the constitutional significance of the decisions in R (on the application of...
After the Second World War, new international rules heralded an age of human rights and self-determi...
Amongst Britain’s former colonies the independent countries of the Commonwealth Caribbean represent ...
The essay begins with an exploration of how Henry Neville's fictional Isle of Pines (1668) plays thr...
Constitutionalism is characterised by tensions and ambiguities. The Westminster constitutional frame...
The doctrine of parliamentary sovereignty in the United Kingdom may be alive but it is not exactly w...
Good governance requires the accommodation of multiple interests in the cause of decision making. Ho...
The British Indian Ocean Territory’s (BIOT) establishment in the 1960s exemplifies the UK’s efforts ...
This article argues that despite the UK Government’s exaltations of self-determination of its Overse...
Abstract In its Chagos Advisory Opinion, the International Court of Justice (ICJ) ruled that the UK'...
This article argues that despite the UK Government’s exaltations of self-determination of its Overse...
Comparative constitutional law is prone to two types of error. ‘Thin’ or overly formal accounts over...
The British Empire is treated as a historical phenomenon, but it enjoys a residual existence in the ...
This book offers a detailed account of the legal issues concerning the British Indian Ocean Territor...
One way of understanding the exile of the Chagos Islanders and their inability to return to their an...
This essay will explore the constitutional significance of the decisions in R (on the application of...
After the Second World War, new international rules heralded an age of human rights and self-determi...
Amongst Britain’s former colonies the independent countries of the Commonwealth Caribbean represent ...
The essay begins with an exploration of how Henry Neville's fictional Isle of Pines (1668) plays thr...
Constitutionalism is characterised by tensions and ambiguities. The Westminster constitutional frame...
The doctrine of parliamentary sovereignty in the United Kingdom may be alive but it is not exactly w...