My thesis deals with the legal concept of sovereign Parliament, the very keystone of British constitution according to A. V. Dicey. This model has been challenged both normatively and descriptively. Concerning the normative point of view, concept of unlimited sovereignty is incoherent. Descriptively, courts don't simply take the parliamentary supremacy for granted, even if they say so. Relationship between the Parliament and courts is certainly more complex than Dicey suggested. Goals of this thesis are rather tentative. Since the popularity of this topic among British constitutional lawyers, comprehensive analysis is implausible due to the limited space. This paper aims to gather fundamental theories and disputes regarding the parliamentar...
The jurist A. V. Dicey’s study of the Law of the Constitution (1885) has been since its publication ...
In this article, the authors will consider a very narrow yet spectacularly important aspect of the r...
The doctrine of parliamentary sovereignty in the United Kingdom may be alive but it is not exactly w...
Parliamentary sovereignty has traditionally been understood to mean that Parliament is free to enact...
In this article the relationship between Parliament and courts is examined. The views of writers on ...
The aim of this paper is to explore the role of judicial review of legislation in the UK from a lega...
The omnipotence of Parliament is one of the cardinal features of the British Constitution. It has t...
Rivka Weill claims that in the nineteenth century the foundation of the UK constitution changed from...
The Supreme Court in the Miller cases confirmed without dissent that the doctrine of parliamentary s...
This article criticises the commonly-held view that parliamentary sovereignty are autonomous, and po...
In the late 1980s, a vigorous debate began about how we may best justify, in constitutional terms, t...
In the late 1980s, a vigorous debate began about how we may best justify, in constitutional terms, t...
This article is a response to the contributions of Nick Barber and Trevor Allan found in this volume...
Two competing theories have emerged as providing the constitutional basis for judicial review in the...
In 19th century English constitutionalist Albert Venn Dicey\u27s classic statement of the doctrine o...
The jurist A. V. Dicey’s study of the Law of the Constitution (1885) has been since its publication ...
In this article, the authors will consider a very narrow yet spectacularly important aspect of the r...
The doctrine of parliamentary sovereignty in the United Kingdom may be alive but it is not exactly w...
Parliamentary sovereignty has traditionally been understood to mean that Parliament is free to enact...
In this article the relationship between Parliament and courts is examined. The views of writers on ...
The aim of this paper is to explore the role of judicial review of legislation in the UK from a lega...
The omnipotence of Parliament is one of the cardinal features of the British Constitution. It has t...
Rivka Weill claims that in the nineteenth century the foundation of the UK constitution changed from...
The Supreme Court in the Miller cases confirmed without dissent that the doctrine of parliamentary s...
This article criticises the commonly-held view that parliamentary sovereignty are autonomous, and po...
In the late 1980s, a vigorous debate began about how we may best justify, in constitutional terms, t...
In the late 1980s, a vigorous debate began about how we may best justify, in constitutional terms, t...
This article is a response to the contributions of Nick Barber and Trevor Allan found in this volume...
Two competing theories have emerged as providing the constitutional basis for judicial review in the...
In 19th century English constitutionalist Albert Venn Dicey\u27s classic statement of the doctrine o...
The jurist A. V. Dicey’s study of the Law of the Constitution (1885) has been since its publication ...
In this article, the authors will consider a very narrow yet spectacularly important aspect of the r...
The doctrine of parliamentary sovereignty in the United Kingdom may be alive but it is not exactly w...