This article examines the ancient, well attested, but largely unexamined, inherent jurisdiction of the court to supervise, and if necessary administer and execute, any trust. It considers the modern and inventive use of this jurisdiction, and its vital role in the juridification of innovative trust practice. The final section of the article draws out the significant theoretical implications of the court’s inherent jurisdiction and sets out an agenda for further researchPeer reviewe
This chapter discusses the historical and analytical conceptions of the express trust in the period ...
This article tells the story of the birth of modern judicial review. In the conventional account, th...
Relatively little has been written about the detailed workings of the court of chancery after the re...
This article examines the ancient, well attested, but largely unexamined, inherent jurisdiction of t...
An examination of the practical and theoretical importance of the inherent jurisdiction of the court...
The means by which modern flexible discretionary settlements are enforced and the theoretical implic...
This article is concerned with s. 61 of the Trustee Act 1925. It will analyse the origins, design an...
Usually thought of as only a remedial measure, the resulting trust may now be ready to take on an ex...
A review of the Special Trusts (Alternative Regime) Law 1997 (STAR) enacted in the Cayman Islands. A...
This paper describes how the English courts, in the “heroic act of judicial invention”, have develop...
The notion that a trust may fail because it serves no useful purpose, or reflects merely the whim or...
In a recent opinion of the Supreme Court of the United States Justice Holmes makes this interesting ...
This piece is a short discussion on the English; and more widely the common law concept of the trust...
The article focuses on judicial politics in three international regimes. The courts of these regimes...
The aim of this article is to flesh out the implications of seeing universal jurisdiction as a claim...
This chapter discusses the historical and analytical conceptions of the express trust in the period ...
This article tells the story of the birth of modern judicial review. In the conventional account, th...
Relatively little has been written about the detailed workings of the court of chancery after the re...
This article examines the ancient, well attested, but largely unexamined, inherent jurisdiction of t...
An examination of the practical and theoretical importance of the inherent jurisdiction of the court...
The means by which modern flexible discretionary settlements are enforced and the theoretical implic...
This article is concerned with s. 61 of the Trustee Act 1925. It will analyse the origins, design an...
Usually thought of as only a remedial measure, the resulting trust may now be ready to take on an ex...
A review of the Special Trusts (Alternative Regime) Law 1997 (STAR) enacted in the Cayman Islands. A...
This paper describes how the English courts, in the “heroic act of judicial invention”, have develop...
The notion that a trust may fail because it serves no useful purpose, or reflects merely the whim or...
In a recent opinion of the Supreme Court of the United States Justice Holmes makes this interesting ...
This piece is a short discussion on the English; and more widely the common law concept of the trust...
The article focuses on judicial politics in three international regimes. The courts of these regimes...
The aim of this article is to flesh out the implications of seeing universal jurisdiction as a claim...
This chapter discusses the historical and analytical conceptions of the express trust in the period ...
This article tells the story of the birth of modern judicial review. In the conventional account, th...
Relatively little has been written about the detailed workings of the court of chancery after the re...