In the United Kingdom (UK), tensions between the executive and the judiciary reignited recently when the government launched a thinly veiled ‘attack’ on the courts in an ‘Independent Review of Administrative Law’ (IRAL). 1 Largely understood to have been triggered by the government’s defeats in the Miller cases,2 the IRAL seems intended to limit the availability of judicial review against the government. 3 This article revisits some (unpublished) arguments made by the author at the time of the Miller I judgment about its true driving force.4 It also considers a similar impulse in the Scottish Continuity Bill case5 that was considered around the same time.6 It argues that the Supreme Court’s procedural protections of EU-derived rights a...
A public lawyer at the Scottish Bar tells of the first time that they invited the Court of Session t...
In June 2016, participants in a United Kingdom referendum voted to leave the European Union (EU) by ...
The impact of EU membership on the UK constitution has been profound. In the Miller (Article 50) cas...
The Supreme Court’s 8:3 ruling against the government is measured and restrained in tone – but it is...
An unprecedented eleven-member UK Supreme Court decided R (Miller) v Secretary of State for Exiting ...
The Scottish Continuity Bill reference – the first legislative competence dispute between the UK and...
As we celebrate its first decade it is clear that the Supreme Court is coming to terms with its posi...
This article analyses the recent decision of the UK Supreme Court determining the UK’s ‘constitution...
The Supreme Court in Miller upheld the Divisional Court, and decided that the government could not t...
his note examines the UK Supreme Court's judgment in the Brexit case, Miller v Secretary of State fo...
In R (Miller) v Prime Minister (No. 2) the UKSC invalidated an attempted prorogation of Parliament, ...
The simple outcome of Miller 2 is that the Executive lost, and Parliament returned to work. However,...
The United Kingdom’s constitution is obscure and open textured. The powers of the state are vested i...
This note critically examines the UK Supreme Court’s judgment in R (Miller) v Secretary of State for...
The Supreme Court’s ruling against the government is measured and restrained in tone – but it is the...
A public lawyer at the Scottish Bar tells of the first time that they invited the Court of Session t...
In June 2016, participants in a United Kingdom referendum voted to leave the European Union (EU) by ...
The impact of EU membership on the UK constitution has been profound. In the Miller (Article 50) cas...
The Supreme Court’s 8:3 ruling against the government is measured and restrained in tone – but it is...
An unprecedented eleven-member UK Supreme Court decided R (Miller) v Secretary of State for Exiting ...
The Scottish Continuity Bill reference – the first legislative competence dispute between the UK and...
As we celebrate its first decade it is clear that the Supreme Court is coming to terms with its posi...
This article analyses the recent decision of the UK Supreme Court determining the UK’s ‘constitution...
The Supreme Court in Miller upheld the Divisional Court, and decided that the government could not t...
his note examines the UK Supreme Court's judgment in the Brexit case, Miller v Secretary of State fo...
In R (Miller) v Prime Minister (No. 2) the UKSC invalidated an attempted prorogation of Parliament, ...
The simple outcome of Miller 2 is that the Executive lost, and Parliament returned to work. However,...
The United Kingdom’s constitution is obscure and open textured. The powers of the state are vested i...
This note critically examines the UK Supreme Court’s judgment in R (Miller) v Secretary of State for...
The Supreme Court’s ruling against the government is measured and restrained in tone – but it is the...
A public lawyer at the Scottish Bar tells of the first time that they invited the Court of Session t...
In June 2016, participants in a United Kingdom referendum voted to leave the European Union (EU) by ...
The impact of EU membership on the UK constitution has been profound. In the Miller (Article 50) cas...