The British Empire is treated as a historical phenomenon, but it enjoys a residual existence in the form of the various Overseas Territories of the UK. This paper considers the constitutional position of those territories. It shows that they are mostly excluded from what is called here the ‘domestic’ constitution, having no representation in its institutions and, when acknowledged, if at all, conceived of as foreign entities. Instead, the Overseas Territories are governed mostly via a distinct (post-)imperial constitution, primarily via the mechanism of the Privy Council. That institution, which does little work within the domestic constitution, creates a formal divide between the domestic and the imperial. This formal divide both masks the...
Constitutionalism is characterised by tensions and ambiguities. The Westminster constitutional frame...
Amongst Britain’s former colonies the independent countries of the Commonwealth Caribbean represent ...
‘[F]ederalism provisions of constitutions are often peculiarly the product of political compromise i...
The British Empire is treated as a historical phenomenon, but it enjoys a residual existence in the ...
This article argues that despite the UK Government’s exaltations of self-determination of its Overse...
This article argues that despite the UK Government’s exaltations of self-determination of its Overse...
This article argues that despite the UK Government’s exaltations of self-determination of its Overse...
Following the British decolonization process, the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council (JCPC) con...
In the United Kingdom and those countries that recognise Elizabeth II as their Queen,1 there are to ...
In the United Kingdom and those countries that recognise Elizabeth II as their Queen,1 there are to ...
In the United Kingdom and those countries that recognise Elizabeth II as their Queen,1 there are to ...
In the United Kingdom and those countries that recognise Elizabeth II as their Queen,1 there are to ...
In the United Kingdom and those countries that recognise Elizabeth II as their Queen,1 there are to ...
The United Kingdom of course is a nation; its colonies respectively or collectively are not. How sta...
Constitutionalism is characterised by tensions and ambiguities. The Westminster constitutional frame...
Constitutionalism is characterised by tensions and ambiguities. The Westminster constitutional frame...
Amongst Britain’s former colonies the independent countries of the Commonwealth Caribbean represent ...
‘[F]ederalism provisions of constitutions are often peculiarly the product of political compromise i...
The British Empire is treated as a historical phenomenon, but it enjoys a residual existence in the ...
This article argues that despite the UK Government’s exaltations of self-determination of its Overse...
This article argues that despite the UK Government’s exaltations of self-determination of its Overse...
This article argues that despite the UK Government’s exaltations of self-determination of its Overse...
Following the British decolonization process, the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council (JCPC) con...
In the United Kingdom and those countries that recognise Elizabeth II as their Queen,1 there are to ...
In the United Kingdom and those countries that recognise Elizabeth II as their Queen,1 there are to ...
In the United Kingdom and those countries that recognise Elizabeth II as their Queen,1 there are to ...
In the United Kingdom and those countries that recognise Elizabeth II as their Queen,1 there are to ...
In the United Kingdom and those countries that recognise Elizabeth II as their Queen,1 there are to ...
The United Kingdom of course is a nation; its colonies respectively or collectively are not. How sta...
Constitutionalism is characterised by tensions and ambiguities. The Westminster constitutional frame...
Constitutionalism is characterised by tensions and ambiguities. The Westminster constitutional frame...
Amongst Britain’s former colonies the independent countries of the Commonwealth Caribbean represent ...
‘[F]ederalism provisions of constitutions are often peculiarly the product of political compromise i...