Limit search to available items
Book Cover
Book
Author Allan, T. R. S. (Trevor R. S.)

Title Constitutional justice : a liberal theory of the rule of law / T.R.S. Allan
Edition New paperback edition
Published Oxford ; New York : Oxford University Press, 2001

Copies

Location Call no. Vol. Availability
 MELB  KM 31 All/Cja  AVAILABLE
Description x, 331 pages ; 24 cm
Contents Ch. 1. Introduction -- Ch. 2. First Principles: the Rule of Law and Separation of Powers -- Ch. 3. Legal Obligation and the Concept of Law -- Ch. 4. Dissent and Disobedience -- Ch. 5. Equal Justice and Due Process of Law -- Ch. 6. Justiciability and Jurisdiction: Political Questions and the Scope of Judicial Review -- Ch. 7. The Rule of Law and Parliamentary Sovereignty -- Ch. 8. Fundamental Common Law Rights and Equality -- Ch. 9. Public Reason and Political Conflict
Summary "In Constitutional Justice, the concept of the rule of law is explained and defended as an ideal of constitutionalism; and the general principles of public law are set in the broader perspective of legal and political philosophy. Although primarily an essay in constitutional theory, its practical implications are fully explained by reference to case-law examples. Drawing on the experience of a number of common law countries - especially Britain, the United States, and Australia - Allan seeks to identify the common elements of a shared constitutional framework that provides the foundations, in each case, of a liberal democratic legal order. These common foundations include certain constraints on the exercise of state power, challenging the widespread view that the rule of law should be conceived as a purely procedural ideal."
"The book explains the essential connections between a range of matters critical to the relationship between citizen and state, including freedoms of speech and conscience, civil disobedience, procedural fairness, administrative justice, the right of silence, and equal protection or equality before the law. The limits of parliamentary sovereignty are shown to derive from its status as a common law doctrine, when the common law is interpreted as a deliberative process of moral argument and justification. Legislative supremacy is qualified by a counter-balancing judicial sovereignty, ensuring the protection of fundamental common law rights of procedural fairness and equality."--BOOK JACKET
Notes Includes index
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages [317]-322) and indexes
Subject Rule of law -- Philosophy.
Constitutional law -- Philosophy.
SUBJECT Germany -- Ethnic relations. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh2008105263
Author Wright, Jonathan.
Pulzer, Peter G. J. (Peter George Julius)
Tewes, Henning.
LC no. 2001021217
ISBN 0198187602 cased
0199247137 paperback
0199242070 :
0198297238 :
0198298307