Devolution for Northern Ireland, Scotland, and Wales resulted in an asymmetrical constitutional framework. The Welsh settlement was more limited than that for Northern Ireland and Scotland. However, since the Government of Wales Acts of 1998 and 2006, Wales has eventually achieved primary law-making powers. Regrettably, the stages leading to the present position resulted in an often confused and confusing body of law. Practitioners wishing to know the content of Welsh law on a subject may encounter a complex tapestry of different types of enactments. The next step for Wales must be improved accessibility and codification. The process of devolution continues. This paper by Professor John Williams was delivered at the BIALL Annual Conference ...
In light of the current debate around establishing a separate or distinct legal jurisdiction for Wal...
This report highlights how the institutions responsible for the administration of justice in England...
Is Wales a jurisdiction? At present it is not, although that is not to say that it will never become...
Devolution for Northern Ireland, Scotland, and Wales resulted in an asymmetrical constitutional fram...
Following the Assembly Elections in May 2007 Wales moved into a new area in its devolutionary settle...
Reflects on the complex constitutional arrangements applicable to a devolved Wales under the Wales A...
With the advent of devolution in in 1999, Wales, for the first time in centuries, began to develop a...
This article examines the devolution process in Wales, with a focus upon the concepts of jurisdictio...
The purpose of this article is to analyze, on the example of Wales, the process of devolution in Gre...
Paper presented to the IBIS conference, Renovation or revolution? new territorial politics in Irelan...
In 2010 the coalition government established the Commission on Devolution in Wales, tasked with cons...
ABSTRACTThis paper outlines how devolution has evolved in Wales since 1998, noting the effects of bo...
Abstract Through the theoretical paradigms of constitutional theory and of movements from territoria...
Over the past two decades, devolution in Wales has undergone a remarkable transformation. A Welsh As...
It is argued that the next stage of devolution may well be a devolved criminal justice system for Wa...
In light of the current debate around establishing a separate or distinct legal jurisdiction for Wal...
This report highlights how the institutions responsible for the administration of justice in England...
Is Wales a jurisdiction? At present it is not, although that is not to say that it will never become...
Devolution for Northern Ireland, Scotland, and Wales resulted in an asymmetrical constitutional fram...
Following the Assembly Elections in May 2007 Wales moved into a new area in its devolutionary settle...
Reflects on the complex constitutional arrangements applicable to a devolved Wales under the Wales A...
With the advent of devolution in in 1999, Wales, for the first time in centuries, began to develop a...
This article examines the devolution process in Wales, with a focus upon the concepts of jurisdictio...
The purpose of this article is to analyze, on the example of Wales, the process of devolution in Gre...
Paper presented to the IBIS conference, Renovation or revolution? new territorial politics in Irelan...
In 2010 the coalition government established the Commission on Devolution in Wales, tasked with cons...
ABSTRACTThis paper outlines how devolution has evolved in Wales since 1998, noting the effects of bo...
Abstract Through the theoretical paradigms of constitutional theory and of movements from territoria...
Over the past two decades, devolution in Wales has undergone a remarkable transformation. A Welsh As...
It is argued that the next stage of devolution may well be a devolved criminal justice system for Wa...
In light of the current debate around establishing a separate or distinct legal jurisdiction for Wal...
This report highlights how the institutions responsible for the administration of justice in England...
Is Wales a jurisdiction? At present it is not, although that is not to say that it will never become...