It is clear from the research on the political and legal constitutions around regulatory power that it is a complex picture. The question for this paper is whether there is a relationship between regulatory governance and institutions and the judiciaries, i.e. are they constrained by the rule of law in the same way as classical administration? The first part of this paper will start to chart out an expansion and contraction of judicial power in relation to executive powers. The second part will provide a comparison between England and France’s regulatory systems and their relationships to their respective judiciaries. The conclusion sets out to answer the main question of where the judiciary sits in an a complex political, economic and lega...
All modern societies tend to entrust the adjudication of disputes arising from the application of re...
All modern societies tend to entrust the adjudication of disputes arising from the application of re...
Regulating Judges presents a novel approach to judicial studies. It goes beyond the traditional clas...
When examining the recent evolution of the Constitution, it is argued that the UK has become more ‘l...
Despite the semantic vagueness that seems to affect nowadays the concept of governance, one may safe...
This article intends to offer a methodological clarification of Foucault’s genealogy in relation to...
An exposition on a new regulatory theory; Common law courts as regulators – the judiciary as a regul...
This book explains the emergence and functioning of three forms of governance structures within the ...
This chapter forms part of a larger project examining governance ‘beyond the regulatory state’. Gove...
This article suggests that courts regulate constitutional rights. As such, some may attribute to its...
Over the last few decades, the UK has experienced a profound – if quiet – constitutional transformat...
Over the last few decades, the UK has experienced a profound – if quiet – constitutional transformat...
Over the last few decades, the UK has experienced a profound – if quiet – constitutional transformat...
none2Who governs the judiciary in the twenty-seven member states of the EU? The chapter seeks to pro...
Regulating Judges presents a novel approach to judicial studies. It goes beyond the traditional clas...
All modern societies tend to entrust the adjudication of disputes arising from the application of re...
All modern societies tend to entrust the adjudication of disputes arising from the application of re...
Regulating Judges presents a novel approach to judicial studies. It goes beyond the traditional clas...
When examining the recent evolution of the Constitution, it is argued that the UK has become more ‘l...
Despite the semantic vagueness that seems to affect nowadays the concept of governance, one may safe...
This article intends to offer a methodological clarification of Foucault’s genealogy in relation to...
An exposition on a new regulatory theory; Common law courts as regulators – the judiciary as a regul...
This book explains the emergence and functioning of three forms of governance structures within the ...
This chapter forms part of a larger project examining governance ‘beyond the regulatory state’. Gove...
This article suggests that courts regulate constitutional rights. As such, some may attribute to its...
Over the last few decades, the UK has experienced a profound – if quiet – constitutional transformat...
Over the last few decades, the UK has experienced a profound – if quiet – constitutional transformat...
Over the last few decades, the UK has experienced a profound – if quiet – constitutional transformat...
none2Who governs the judiciary in the twenty-seven member states of the EU? The chapter seeks to pro...
Regulating Judges presents a novel approach to judicial studies. It goes beyond the traditional clas...
All modern societies tend to entrust the adjudication of disputes arising from the application of re...
All modern societies tend to entrust the adjudication of disputes arising from the application of re...
Regulating Judges presents a novel approach to judicial studies. It goes beyond the traditional clas...