This thesis concerns the distinction between public and private law in English administrative law, concentrating upon judicial remedies and procedures. Chapter 1 of the thesis examines the circumstances that led to the decision of the House of Lords in O'Reilly v. Mackman (that in some cases public law issues may be raised only by Application for Judicial Review (AJR) under RSC Order 53) and outlines in broad terms the problems for litigants which the decision has posed. Also discussed is the "obverse" of the O'Reilly rule, laid down in R v. East Berks. Area Health Authority, ex parte Walsh (CA), that disputes raising no public law issue cannot be litigated by AJR. Chapter 2 examines post-O’Reilly cases in which public law issues have been...
This article reviews the history of the Law Commission project on administrative law and the citizen...
This thesis compares the basis on which the courts, operating through the judicial review procedure,...
This paper assesses challenges in England and in Scotland to the ‘public interest conception’ of jud...
The aim of the thesis is to examine the liability of public authority's within the context of the pu...
In this paper I endorse the basic assumption that informed the Law Commission’s consultation paper o...
Considers the reasons for restricting the Administrative Court's judicial review powers to public la...
This article analyses the case law on ombudsman schemes in the UK, with the purpose of identifying s...
In English law, in spite of the existence of the Crown Prosecution Service, every person still has t...
The article examines questions of public law as they apply to some of the scandals that have affecte...
Between the 1970s and the end of the 1990s, the House of Lords and the Court of Appeal attempted to ...
Public law adjudication has grown dramatically in recent decades in many English-speaking countries....
Conference Theme: The Unity of Public Law?Vindicatory damages in public law are a novel head of dama...
In the light of recent English cases concerning the right of individuals to bring private prosecutio...
Since the House of Lords’ decision in the Gorringe case, there can be no reason for imposing a duty ...
This thesis considers the phenomenon of soft law. The very name ‘soft law’ sounds like an...
This article reviews the history of the Law Commission project on administrative law and the citizen...
This thesis compares the basis on which the courts, operating through the judicial review procedure,...
This paper assesses challenges in England and in Scotland to the ‘public interest conception’ of jud...
The aim of the thesis is to examine the liability of public authority's within the context of the pu...
In this paper I endorse the basic assumption that informed the Law Commission’s consultation paper o...
Considers the reasons for restricting the Administrative Court's judicial review powers to public la...
This article analyses the case law on ombudsman schemes in the UK, with the purpose of identifying s...
In English law, in spite of the existence of the Crown Prosecution Service, every person still has t...
The article examines questions of public law as they apply to some of the scandals that have affecte...
Between the 1970s and the end of the 1990s, the House of Lords and the Court of Appeal attempted to ...
Public law adjudication has grown dramatically in recent decades in many English-speaking countries....
Conference Theme: The Unity of Public Law?Vindicatory damages in public law are a novel head of dama...
In the light of recent English cases concerning the right of individuals to bring private prosecutio...
Since the House of Lords’ decision in the Gorringe case, there can be no reason for imposing a duty ...
This thesis considers the phenomenon of soft law. The very name ‘soft law’ sounds like an...
This article reviews the history of the Law Commission project on administrative law and the citizen...
This thesis compares the basis on which the courts, operating through the judicial review procedure,...
This paper assesses challenges in England and in Scotland to the ‘public interest conception’ of jud...