Public law adjudication in common law systems : process and substance /
This volume arises from the inaugural Public Law Conference hosted in September 2014 by the Centre for Public Law at the University of Cambridge, which brought together leading public lawyers from a number of common law jurisdictions. While those from such jurisdictions share background understandin...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Otros Autores: | , , , |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Oxford :
Hart Publishing,
2016.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Foreword ; Contents ; Contributors ; Table of Cases ; Table of Legislation ; 1. Introduction ; I. The Chapters ; II. Acknowledgements ; 2. Public Reason and Administrative Legitimacy ; I. Introduction ; II. Public Reason and its Critics ; III. Why Public Reason is Necessary ; IV. Triumph and Tragedy of Administrative Rationality ; 3. Administrative Law: A Values-based Approach ; I. Introduction ; II. Administrative Law Values ; III. Values and Doctrinal Rules ; IV. Institutional Considerations ; V. Conclusion.
- 4. The Public Interest Conception of Public Law: Its Procedural Origins and Substantive Implications I. Introduction ; II. Public Interest Conception ; III. Legacy of the Public Interest Conception ; IV. Conclusions ; 5. Process, Substance and the History of Error of Law Review ; I. Introduction ; II. Development of Certiorari to Quash ; III. Evidence in Certiorari Proceedings ; IV. Certiorari, Affidavits and the Concept of Jurisdiction ; V. Twentieth-century Developments in Error of Law Review.
- VI. Re-evaluating the Distinction Between Jurisdictional and Non-Jurisdictional Errors of Law VII. Conclusion ; 6. The Growth of Substantive Review: The Changes, their Causes and their Consequences ; I. Introduction ; II. Process, Substance and Quality ; III. Expansion of Substantive Review ; IV. Judicial Review's Mission Creep ; V. Some Reasons for Expansion ; VI. Possible Consequences of Expanding Substantive Review ; VII. Conclusions ; 7. 'Blasphemy Against Basics': Doctrine, Conceptual Reasoning and Certain Decisions of the UK Supreme Court ; I. Invention of the Common Law.
- II. The Law as the Judge's Only Master III. What are 'Like Cases'? ; IV. The Inevitability of Injustice ; V. Minerva's Preference for Certainty ; VI. Judicial Review of the Upper Tribunal: Is the Law the Master in the Supreme Court? ; VII. Malleable Boundary Between Law and Fact ; VIII. Finding a Hook ; IX. An Alternative View: Fidelity to Doctrine ; X. Concluding Remarks ; 8. The Legitimacy of Expectations About Fairness: Can Process and Substance be Untangled? ; I. Introduction ; II. Modern Expansion of the Duty to Act Fairly ; III. Reasons for Fairness.
- IV. Expectations, Estoppel and Fairness V. Rejection of Estoppel in Australian Public Law ; VI. Conclusion ; 9. Judicial Review of Delegated Legislation: Why Favour Substantive Review over Procedural Review? ; I. Introduction ; II. Review of Delegated Legislation: Legitimacy Questions ; III. Procedural Review ; IV. Substantive Review ; V. Options for Correcting the Imbalance ; VI. Conclusion ; 10. Transubstantiation in Canadian Public Law: Processing Substance and Instantiating Process ; I. Introduction.