Professor Margaret Wilson, Professor of Law and Public Policy, Te Piringa - Faculty of Law, University of Waikato delivered the 2010 Harkness Henry Lecture. She spoke about the rite of passage for New Zealand's legal system from Privy Council to Supreme Court
The enactment of a supreme law Bill of Rights in New Zealand would have significant implications for...
The decision of the High Court of New Zealand in the case of Pisaina Leilua-Lei Sam v The Council fo...
This essay argues that New Zealand’s courts, when considering constitutional matters on which there ...
Professor Margaret Wilson, Professor of Law and Public Policy, Te Piringa - Faculty of Law, Universi...
The Supreme Court Act came into force 1 January 2004. It would be fair to describe the reactions to ...
This thesis was an investigation into the consequences of the Supreme Court Act 2003. The main purpo...
This is the revised text of Geoff McLay's inaugural lecture given in the Council Chamber at Victoria...
The constitutional landscape in New Zealand has undergone significant change over the last 20-35 yea...
The New Zealand Supreme Court’s decision in Wi Parata v Bishop of Wellington[1] was nothing less tha...
The advent of MMP may make a considerable difference to the way law is practised in New Zealand. It ...
The nine pieces that comprise this submission for a doctorate of philosophy in law are concerned wit...
Dr Kate Malleson (Department of Law, London School of Economics) assesses the need and tasks involve...
This edition of the Waikato Law Review is dedicated to our dear friend and colleague, Matiu Dickson,...
The current mechanism for judicial appointments in New Zealand is non-transparent and lacks sufficie...
The experiences of the Waikato Law School especially from the viewpoint of challenges to legal educa...
The enactment of a supreme law Bill of Rights in New Zealand would have significant implications for...
The decision of the High Court of New Zealand in the case of Pisaina Leilua-Lei Sam v The Council fo...
This essay argues that New Zealand’s courts, when considering constitutional matters on which there ...
Professor Margaret Wilson, Professor of Law and Public Policy, Te Piringa - Faculty of Law, Universi...
The Supreme Court Act came into force 1 January 2004. It would be fair to describe the reactions to ...
This thesis was an investigation into the consequences of the Supreme Court Act 2003. The main purpo...
This is the revised text of Geoff McLay's inaugural lecture given in the Council Chamber at Victoria...
The constitutional landscape in New Zealand has undergone significant change over the last 20-35 yea...
The New Zealand Supreme Court’s decision in Wi Parata v Bishop of Wellington[1] was nothing less tha...
The advent of MMP may make a considerable difference to the way law is practised in New Zealand. It ...
The nine pieces that comprise this submission for a doctorate of philosophy in law are concerned wit...
Dr Kate Malleson (Department of Law, London School of Economics) assesses the need and tasks involve...
This edition of the Waikato Law Review is dedicated to our dear friend and colleague, Matiu Dickson,...
The current mechanism for judicial appointments in New Zealand is non-transparent and lacks sufficie...
The experiences of the Waikato Law School especially from the viewpoint of challenges to legal educa...
The enactment of a supreme law Bill of Rights in New Zealand would have significant implications for...
The decision of the High Court of New Zealand in the case of Pisaina Leilua-Lei Sam v The Council fo...
This essay argues that New Zealand’s courts, when considering constitutional matters on which there ...