Over the last few decades, the UK has experienced a profound – if quiet – constitutional transformation. The judicial reception of EU law, for instance, has been described as ‘one of the most fundamental realignments of the constitutional order since the end of the seventeenth century’. But these developments have hardly been appreciated within broader public debates, which remain rooted in/anchored to notions of parliamentary sovereignty
The UK Constitution has recently witnessed upheaval, most of it relating to the UK’s exit from the E...
Judicial independence is generally understood as requiring that judges must be insulated from politi...
My thesis deals with the legal concept of sovereign Parliament, the very keystone of British constit...
Over the last few decades, the UK has experienced a profound – if quiet – constitutional transformat...
The rise of judicial power throughout the common law world is a departure from a shared constitution...
For most of the 20th Century, the constitution of the United Kingdom was seen as essentially settled...
As we celebrate its first decade it is clear that the Supreme Court is coming to terms with its posi...
The role of the UK Supreme Court as conventionally understood is to give effect to, and not to chall...
Conventional academic discourse, within both law and political science tells the story of how the Eu...
The nature and scope of judicial power lies at the centre of contemporary constitutional debate in m...
The UK constitutional system is in a transitional stage (e.g. Bogdanor). In this essay, I argue that...
The aim of this paper is to explore the role of judicial review of legislation in the UK from a lega...
Considers the extent to which the UK doctrine of separation of powers exerts a normative influence o...
The impact of EU membership on the UK constitution has been profound. In the Miller (Article 50) cas...
The outgoing tide of EU law will be Britain’s most significant constitutional change in recent times...
The UK Constitution has recently witnessed upheaval, most of it relating to the UK’s exit from the E...
Judicial independence is generally understood as requiring that judges must be insulated from politi...
My thesis deals with the legal concept of sovereign Parliament, the very keystone of British constit...
Over the last few decades, the UK has experienced a profound – if quiet – constitutional transformat...
The rise of judicial power throughout the common law world is a departure from a shared constitution...
For most of the 20th Century, the constitution of the United Kingdom was seen as essentially settled...
As we celebrate its first decade it is clear that the Supreme Court is coming to terms with its posi...
The role of the UK Supreme Court as conventionally understood is to give effect to, and not to chall...
Conventional academic discourse, within both law and political science tells the story of how the Eu...
The nature and scope of judicial power lies at the centre of contemporary constitutional debate in m...
The UK constitutional system is in a transitional stage (e.g. Bogdanor). In this essay, I argue that...
The aim of this paper is to explore the role of judicial review of legislation in the UK from a lega...
Considers the extent to which the UK doctrine of separation of powers exerts a normative influence o...
The impact of EU membership on the UK constitution has been profound. In the Miller (Article 50) cas...
The outgoing tide of EU law will be Britain’s most significant constitutional change in recent times...
The UK Constitution has recently witnessed upheaval, most of it relating to the UK’s exit from the E...
Judicial independence is generally understood as requiring that judges must be insulated from politi...
My thesis deals with the legal concept of sovereign Parliament, the very keystone of British constit...