Considers the reasons for restricting the Administrative Court's judicial review powers to public law concerns, and why a measure of uncertainty over the outer limits of judicial review's supervisory jurisdiction is likely to remain. Examines possible arguments to support the restriction based on issues of jurisdiction, the monopoly powers test, public interest, the operation of the rule of law and the available remedies
One of the subthemes in the delegation debate concerns the importance of judicial review. The Suprem...
This essay on judicial review approaches its subject obliquely. It focuses on a particular site of c...
The purpose of this dissertation is to address the question of how we can constitutionally justify t...
The central thesis of this dissertation is that for the purposes of English domestic judicial review...
The purpose of this dissertation is to address the question of how we can constitutionally justify t...
When exercising judicial review, the courts, on occasions, have intervened in circumstances where ad...
Responds to the article by Colin D. Campbell entitled "Monopoly power as public power for the purpos...
This paper assesses challenges in England and in Scotland to the ‘public interest conception’ of jud...
It is axiomatic that all power requires justification, and that is equally true for judicial power a...
During the past decade we have witnessed a vast growth in the volume and variety of discretionary p...
During the past decade we have witnessed a vast growth in the volume and variety of discretionary p...
In the late 1980s, a vigorous debate began about how we may best justify, in constitutional terms, t...
In the late 1980s, a vigorous debate began about how we may best justify, in constitutional terms, t...
In the late 1980s, a vigorous debate began about how we may best justify, in constitutional terms, t...
© 2009 Dr. Elizabeth Emily HammondAustralian law imposes a duty to exercise statutory discretions re...
One of the subthemes in the delegation debate concerns the importance of judicial review. The Suprem...
This essay on judicial review approaches its subject obliquely. It focuses on a particular site of c...
The purpose of this dissertation is to address the question of how we can constitutionally justify t...
The central thesis of this dissertation is that for the purposes of English domestic judicial review...
The purpose of this dissertation is to address the question of how we can constitutionally justify t...
When exercising judicial review, the courts, on occasions, have intervened in circumstances where ad...
Responds to the article by Colin D. Campbell entitled "Monopoly power as public power for the purpos...
This paper assesses challenges in England and in Scotland to the ‘public interest conception’ of jud...
It is axiomatic that all power requires justification, and that is equally true for judicial power a...
During the past decade we have witnessed a vast growth in the volume and variety of discretionary p...
During the past decade we have witnessed a vast growth in the volume and variety of discretionary p...
In the late 1980s, a vigorous debate began about how we may best justify, in constitutional terms, t...
In the late 1980s, a vigorous debate began about how we may best justify, in constitutional terms, t...
In the late 1980s, a vigorous debate began about how we may best justify, in constitutional terms, t...
© 2009 Dr. Elizabeth Emily HammondAustralian law imposes a duty to exercise statutory discretions re...
One of the subthemes in the delegation debate concerns the importance of judicial review. The Suprem...
This essay on judicial review approaches its subject obliquely. It focuses on a particular site of c...
The purpose of this dissertation is to address the question of how we can constitutionally justify t...