This chapter considers the record of the Irish Supreme Court in its constitutional policing of the two political “organs of State.” It outlines the basis upon which the judicial organ enjoys the authority to determine the limits of the powers of the Oireachtas and Government. It explores the various approaches taken by judges and courts in a selection of the main cases in the period 1970-2020
75 years of the Constitution of Ireland: An Irish-Italian Dialogue is a unique work which explores s...
This article argues that TD v Minister for Education was about something more specific than has been...
Judicial power in the United Kingdom has been a subject of contemporary debate within constitutional...
This chapter considers the record of the Irish Supreme Court in its constitutional policing of the t...
The Irish judiciary are self-governing only in a limited respect. Just as in many other common law c...
Regulation is about control or steering of behaviours through the setting of norms, the monitoring o...
Studying the Irish Constitutional Law, requires the understanding of how the Irish Political System ...
Judicial independence is generally understood as requiring that judges must be insulated from politi...
peer-reviewedIn Ireland, judges can only be removed as a result of ‘stated misbehaviour’ but the ext...
Deference refers to a certain respect or esteem which is due to a superior or an elder or a tendency...
This article considers Angela Kerins v John McGuinness, a 2019 case decided by the Irish Supreme Cou...
This article considers the dilemma faced by judges in the famous Ryan v Lennon case, arguing that th...
peer-reviewedThe Judicial Council Act was finally published in July 2019, almost 20 years after it w...
AbstractDamache v Minister for Justice concerned a constitutional challenge to section 19 of the Iri...
© 2015 Cardiff University Law School. Drawing upon interviews with senior judicial figures in North...
75 years of the Constitution of Ireland: An Irish-Italian Dialogue is a unique work which explores s...
This article argues that TD v Minister for Education was about something more specific than has been...
Judicial power in the United Kingdom has been a subject of contemporary debate within constitutional...
This chapter considers the record of the Irish Supreme Court in its constitutional policing of the t...
The Irish judiciary are self-governing only in a limited respect. Just as in many other common law c...
Regulation is about control or steering of behaviours through the setting of norms, the monitoring o...
Studying the Irish Constitutional Law, requires the understanding of how the Irish Political System ...
Judicial independence is generally understood as requiring that judges must be insulated from politi...
peer-reviewedIn Ireland, judges can only be removed as a result of ‘stated misbehaviour’ but the ext...
Deference refers to a certain respect or esteem which is due to a superior or an elder or a tendency...
This article considers Angela Kerins v John McGuinness, a 2019 case decided by the Irish Supreme Cou...
This article considers the dilemma faced by judges in the famous Ryan v Lennon case, arguing that th...
peer-reviewedThe Judicial Council Act was finally published in July 2019, almost 20 years after it w...
AbstractDamache v Minister for Justice concerned a constitutional challenge to section 19 of the Iri...
© 2015 Cardiff University Law School. Drawing upon interviews with senior judicial figures in North...
75 years of the Constitution of Ireland: An Irish-Italian Dialogue is a unique work which explores s...
This article argues that TD v Minister for Education was about something more specific than has been...
Judicial power in the United Kingdom has been a subject of contemporary debate within constitutional...