As we celebrate its first decade it is clear that the Supreme Court is coming to terms with its position as an apex constitutional court for the United Kingdom. Whilst recent trends indicate that this is true even in the face of Westminster legislation and UK Government action, in the devolved sphere the court has been cultivating a bespoke devolution jurisprudence almost from its inception. In this paper I want to focus on two key issues that arise from this. First, that despite the Supreme Court holding itself out to be a truly constitutional court in the devolved sphere – where it has power hitherto unknown to UK courts to strike down primary legislation enacted by democratically elected legislatures – it remains uncomfortable proceeding...
Devolution to Scotland, in its current incarnation, is a relatively recent constitutional phenomenon...
Although reaction to the recent Supreme Court ruling on the triggering of Article 50 has focused on ...
The question of the contemporary status of parliamentary sovereignty is a significant and vexed one....
Over the last few decades, the UK has experienced a profound – if quiet – constitutional transformat...
A public lawyer at the Scottish Bar tells of the first time that they invited the Court of Session t...
The courts have different roles in policing Canadian federalism and Scottish devolution. In Canada, ...
The Supreme Court’s ruling against the government is measured and restrained in tone – but it is the...
The Scottish Continuity Bill reference – the first legislative competence dispute between the UK and...
This article is the revised text of a lecture given at the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies on De...
This Bachelor Thesis deals with role of the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom in the devolution pr...
In the United Kingdom (UK), tensions between the executive and the judiciary reignited recently whe...
An unprecedented eleven-member UK Supreme Court decided R (Miller) v Secretary of State for Exiting ...
The piecemeal, ad hoc approach to devolution is creating serious constitutional difficulties beyond ...
The Supreme Court’s 8:3 ruling against the government is measured and restrained in tone – but it is...
The role of the UK Supreme Court as conventionally understood is to give effect to, and not to chall...
Devolution to Scotland, in its current incarnation, is a relatively recent constitutional phenomenon...
Although reaction to the recent Supreme Court ruling on the triggering of Article 50 has focused on ...
The question of the contemporary status of parliamentary sovereignty is a significant and vexed one....
Over the last few decades, the UK has experienced a profound – if quiet – constitutional transformat...
A public lawyer at the Scottish Bar tells of the first time that they invited the Court of Session t...
The courts have different roles in policing Canadian federalism and Scottish devolution. In Canada, ...
The Supreme Court’s ruling against the government is measured and restrained in tone – but it is the...
The Scottish Continuity Bill reference – the first legislative competence dispute between the UK and...
This article is the revised text of a lecture given at the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies on De...
This Bachelor Thesis deals with role of the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom in the devolution pr...
In the United Kingdom (UK), tensions between the executive and the judiciary reignited recently whe...
An unprecedented eleven-member UK Supreme Court decided R (Miller) v Secretary of State for Exiting ...
The piecemeal, ad hoc approach to devolution is creating serious constitutional difficulties beyond ...
The Supreme Court’s 8:3 ruling against the government is measured and restrained in tone – but it is...
The role of the UK Supreme Court as conventionally understood is to give effect to, and not to chall...
Devolution to Scotland, in its current incarnation, is a relatively recent constitutional phenomenon...
Although reaction to the recent Supreme Court ruling on the triggering of Article 50 has focused on ...
The question of the contemporary status of parliamentary sovereignty is a significant and vexed one....