In light of the current debate around establishing a separate or distinct legal jurisdiction for Wales, the aim of this chapter is to highlight that administrative justice is an area where differences in the administration of justice are already occurring in Wales as compared to England and other parts of the UK. In particular the chapter will focus on devolved tribunals in Wales and comparable tribunal reforms in other devolved parts of the UK. I consider the on-going development of the devolved Welsh tribunals and the place of these institutions in debates surrounding a future Welsh legal jurisdiction
This article examines some of the synergies between Phil Thomas’ work and the authors’ research into...
The coalition government in Wales has committed itself to seriously consider devolving the criminal ...
This article sets out the centrality of government to the initiation of law reform in respect of the...
In light of the current debate around establishing a separate or distinct legal jurisdiction for Wal...
Uniquely, Wales has a primary legislature, but remains part of a single legal jurisdiction with Engl...
This report highlights how the institutions responsible for the administration of justice in England...
With the advent of devolution in in 1999, Wales, for the first time in centuries, began to develop a...
Is Wales a jurisdiction? At present it is not, although that is not to say that it will never become...
It is argued that the next stage of devolution may well be a devolved criminal justice system for Wa...
The coalition government in Wales has committed itself to seriously consider devolving the criminal ...
The Conference on Devolution, which sat between October 1919 and April 1920, has been largely relega...
Devolution for Northern Ireland, Scotland, and Wales resulted in an asymmetrical constitutional fram...
Abstract Through the theoretical paradigms of constitutional theory and of movements from territoria...
This article examines the devolution process in Wales, with a focus upon the concepts of jurisdictio...
In 2010 the coalition government established the Commission on Devolution in Wales, tasked with cons...
This article examines some of the synergies between Phil Thomas’ work and the authors’ research into...
The coalition government in Wales has committed itself to seriously consider devolving the criminal ...
This article sets out the centrality of government to the initiation of law reform in respect of the...
In light of the current debate around establishing a separate or distinct legal jurisdiction for Wal...
Uniquely, Wales has a primary legislature, but remains part of a single legal jurisdiction with Engl...
This report highlights how the institutions responsible for the administration of justice in England...
With the advent of devolution in in 1999, Wales, for the first time in centuries, began to develop a...
Is Wales a jurisdiction? At present it is not, although that is not to say that it will never become...
It is argued that the next stage of devolution may well be a devolved criminal justice system for Wa...
The coalition government in Wales has committed itself to seriously consider devolving the criminal ...
The Conference on Devolution, which sat between October 1919 and April 1920, has been largely relega...
Devolution for Northern Ireland, Scotland, and Wales resulted in an asymmetrical constitutional fram...
Abstract Through the theoretical paradigms of constitutional theory and of movements from territoria...
This article examines the devolution process in Wales, with a focus upon the concepts of jurisdictio...
In 2010 the coalition government established the Commission on Devolution in Wales, tasked with cons...
This article examines some of the synergies between Phil Thomas’ work and the authors’ research into...
The coalition government in Wales has committed itself to seriously consider devolving the criminal ...
This article sets out the centrality of government to the initiation of law reform in respect of the...