Litigating rights : perspectives from domestic and international law /
How are rights and freedoms best protected? The American model of constitutional protection and judicial review has been adopted in a number of countries, most recently in the United Kingdom. Increasingly, rights are the province of the judiciary. But how much judicial review do we need? How do we r...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Otros Autores: | , |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Oxford [England] ; Portland, Or. :
Hart Pub.,
2002.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- pt. I. Judicial review and bills of rights
- Rights, bills of rights, and the role of courts and legislatures / Grant Huscroft
- The bill of rights: confirmation of extant freedoms or invitation to judicial creation? / Antonin Scalia
- Rights, paternalism, constitutions and judges / James Allan
- Judicial review, human rights and democracy / Andrew S. Butler
- Human rights review and the public
- private distinction / Murray Hunt
- pt. II. Liberty and equality
- Liberty, equality and the new establishment / Paul Rishworth
- Equality rights in Canada: judicial usurpation or missed opportunities? / Ian Binnie
- Concepts of equality in international law / Hilary Charlesworth
- Liberty and equality: complementary, not competing, constitutional commitments / Nadine Strossen
- pt. III. Group and indigenous rights
- Group rights and constitutional rights / Tim Dare
- Taking group rights carefully / Jeremy Waldron
- Should Maori group right be part of a New Zealand constitution? / Andrew Sharp
- Constitutionalising Maori / Eddie Durie
- pt. IV. Internationalism
- The rule of international law? / Paul Rishworth
- The impact of international human rights on domestic law / Elizabeth Evatt
- Intention and effect: the legal status of the final views of the Human Rights Committee / Scott Davidson
- The UK's Human Rights Act 1998: an early assessment / Ian Leigh.