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masterman roger; leigh ian - the united kingdom's statutory bill of rights
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The United Kingdom's Statutory Bill of Rights Constitutional and Comparative Perspectives

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Dettagli

Genere:Libro
Lingua: Inglese
Pubblicazione: 04/2013





Note Editore

By providing enforceable remedies for breaches of Convention Rights in domestic courts, and in allowing judges to scrutinise parliamentary legislation on human rights grounds, the United Kingdom's Human Rights Act 1998 marked a sea-change in the relationships between the individual and the state, and between the courts and the political branches of government, as they had been traditionally understood. Despite the undeniable practical importance of the Human Rights Act, widespread political and popular scepticism over the nature of rights adjudication and the relationship between human rights laws and-for instance-measures designed to combat terrorism and crime, has prevented the Human Rights Act from being seen as an established and essential part of our constitutional structures. This uncertainty has not however prevented the Human Rights Act from exerting significant constitutional influence within the United Kingdom, within the framework provided by the European Convention and European Court of Human Rights, and beyond. This edited collection of essays therefore seeks to chart the lasting constitutional impact of the Human Rights Act at a point when its political future is far from assured. To that end, chapters examine the relationships between the Human Rights Act and domestic constitutional doctrine, with the Convention's enforcement bodies at Strasbourg and with statutory bills of rights in other common law jurisdictions. Further, the collection goes on to examine the permanence of changes initiated in domestic legal reasoning and process-including to judicial technique and in advocacy-before finally turning to examine how the experience of the Human Rights Act might influence the future development of a Bill of Rights for the United Kingdom.




Sommario

1 - The United Kingdom's Human Rights Project in Constitutional and Comparative Perspective
2 - The Human Rights Act, Dialogue and Constitutional Principles
3 - The Continuation of Politics, by other means: Judicial Dialogue under the Human Rights Act 1998
4 - Back to the Future?: Judges, Politicians and the Constitution in the New Scotland
5 - Deconstructing the Mirror Principle
6 - From monologue to dialogue-the relationship between UK courts and the European Court of Human Rights
7 - Human Rights and Judicial Technique
8 - The Impact of the Human Rights Act on Advocacy
9 - Human Rights and Legislative Supremacy
10 - Australian Bills of Rights and the "New Commonwealth Model of Constitutionalism"
11 - Cross fertilisation of constitutional ideas: The Relationship between the Human Rights Act 1998 and the New Zealand Bill of Rights Act 1990
12 - A Bill of Rights for the UK? Lessons from Overseas
13 - Conservative Anti-HRA Rhetoric, the Bill of Rights "Solution" and the role of the Bill of Rights Commission




Autore

Roger Masterman is Reader in Law at Durham Law School and Co-Director of the Human Rights Centre. Ian Leigh is Professor of Law at Durham University. He is a member of the Durham Human Rights Centre and the Durham Global Security Institute. He has taught at several UK universities and held visiting appointments at the universities of Otago, Florida, Virginia, Melbourne and at Osgoode Hall Law School.










Altre Informazioni

ISBN:

9780197265376

Condizione: Nuovo
Collana: Proceedings of the British Academy
Dimensioni: 241 x 29.2 x 185 mm Ø 760 gr
Formato: Copertina rigida
Pagine Arabe: 370


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