Want a Shipping Estimate? Add an Indian Pin Code, Click Here
This Product
Ships in 3-4 Weeks
Recommend
1
Share
1
Share
1
Share
0
Share
1
Send By e-mail
Verify Phone Number
Please enter the One Time Password (OTP) to verify phone number.
Write your own review
In just a few steps below you can become an online reviewer.
Please click on Continue to submit your review.
Title: Law, Liberty, and Justice: The Legal Foundations of British Constitutionalism
Reviewed By:
Write your review here:
NOTE:HTML is not translated!
Rating:
Share this product on email
Law, Liberty, and Justice: The Legal Foundations of British Constitutionalism
Product Details:
Format: Paperback / softback
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Language: English
Dimensions: 23.00 X 2.00 X 16.00
Publisher Code: 9780198259916
Date Added: 2018-08-03
Search Category: International
Jurisdiction: International
Overview:
The book makes a fresh appraisal of the main principles of constitutional law, seeking to stimulate renewed debate about the fundamentals of British constitutionalism. Rejecting a purely fromal concept of the rule of law, Allan argues that public law should more fully and openly reflect the principles of liberty and justice which constitute the underlying point and substance of the rule of law. The connection between law and justice is ultimately secured by the
primary role of the individual conscience in making judgements about what the law requires. And just as no court is ever an infallible arbiter of legal obligation - the individual may sometimes have to stand by his own conscientious reading of the law - Parliament cannot be accorded unqualified authority
to change the law. The sovreignty of Parliament is necessarily limited by residual principles of leberal constitutionalism; any other view would contradict the rule of law. Standard comparisons between written and unwritten constitutions, and traditional accounts of the separarion of powers, ovscure more than they reveal. The interpretation and application of statutes must always be a matter of judicial deliberation and judgement, just as the application of government policies and
administrative orders is ultimately subject to the requirements of justice in particular cases.