This Article looks at a rare part of the judicial role: those exceptional cases when the judge is called upon to pass judgment on the constitution itself. This arises in three groups of cases, roughly speaking. First, in exceptional cases the validity of the constitution and the legal order is thrown into dispute. Second, on some occasions the judge is asked to rule on the transition from one constitutional order to another. Third, there are some cases in which the health of the constitutional order requires the judge to act not merely beyond the law, as it were, but actually contrary to the law. This Article surveys these situations, and reflects on the principles and processes judges have used, and should use, to guide their reasoning
This article addresses the issue of what is fit for a Supreme Court Justice to do and whether the Co...
In the Supreme Court Act Reference, the Court advised that the appointment of its newest judge, Marc...
To most lawyers and judges, constitutional amendment rules are nothing more than the technical guide...
This Article looks at a rare part of the judicial role: those exceptional cases when the judge is ca...
This paper looks at a rare, and in some ways more exciting, part of the judicial role: those excepti...
This article attempts that task by exploring the elements of institutional choice in constitutional ...
When courts decide cases, their decisions make law because they become precedent that binds future c...
When the newly appointed Justices of the Supreme Court assembled in the Royal Exchange Building in N...
This article shows that there is much to be learnt about the constitutional nature of judicial power...
The ongoing debates over the legitimacy of judicial review-the power of courts to strike down uncons...
The “popular constitutionalism” movement has revived the debate over judicial review. Popular consti...
When do, and when should, actors other than judges interpret the Constitution? Over time, this quest...
Decisions of the Constitutional Court (Trybunał Konstytucyjny), the Supreme Court and the Supreme A...
The purpose of this paper is to describe how judges engage in constitutional design, irrespective of...
Judicial review of statutes on constitutional grounds is affected by a cluster of doctrinal practice...
This article addresses the issue of what is fit for a Supreme Court Justice to do and whether the Co...
In the Supreme Court Act Reference, the Court advised that the appointment of its newest judge, Marc...
To most lawyers and judges, constitutional amendment rules are nothing more than the technical guide...
This Article looks at a rare part of the judicial role: those exceptional cases when the judge is ca...
This paper looks at a rare, and in some ways more exciting, part of the judicial role: those excepti...
This article attempts that task by exploring the elements of institutional choice in constitutional ...
When courts decide cases, their decisions make law because they become precedent that binds future c...
When the newly appointed Justices of the Supreme Court assembled in the Royal Exchange Building in N...
This article shows that there is much to be learnt about the constitutional nature of judicial power...
The ongoing debates over the legitimacy of judicial review-the power of courts to strike down uncons...
The “popular constitutionalism” movement has revived the debate over judicial review. Popular consti...
When do, and when should, actors other than judges interpret the Constitution? Over time, this quest...
Decisions of the Constitutional Court (Trybunał Konstytucyjny), the Supreme Court and the Supreme A...
The purpose of this paper is to describe how judges engage in constitutional design, irrespective of...
Judicial review of statutes on constitutional grounds is affected by a cluster of doctrinal practice...
This article addresses the issue of what is fit for a Supreme Court Justice to do and whether the Co...
In the Supreme Court Act Reference, the Court advised that the appointment of its newest judge, Marc...
To most lawyers and judges, constitutional amendment rules are nothing more than the technical guide...