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This book contains a selection of the essays and addresses written or given by the Senior Law Lord (as a Queen's Bench judge, Lord Justice of Appeal, Master of the Rolls, and Lord Chief Justice of England and Wales) over the last 15 years or so, touching on a wide range of legally-related topics.
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This book contains a selection of the essays and addresses written or given by the Senior Law Lord (as a Queen's Bench judge, Lord Justice of Appeal, Master of the Rolls, and Lord Chief Justice of England and Wales) over the last 15 years or so, touching on a wide range of legally-related topics.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: OUP Oxford
- Seitenzahl: 444
- Erscheinungstermin: 3. August 2000
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 240mm x 161mm x 28mm
- Gewicht: 828g
- ISBN-13: 9780198299127
- ISBN-10: 0198299125
- Artikelnr.: 22253476
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: OUP Oxford
- Seitenzahl: 444
- Erscheinungstermin: 3. August 2000
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 240mm x 161mm x 28mm
- Gewicht: 828g
- ISBN-13: 9780198299127
- ISBN-10: 0198299125
- Artikelnr.: 22253476
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Tom Bingham is The Right Honourable Lord Bingham of Cornhill and Senior Law Lord
* Part I: The Business of Judging
* 1: The Judge as Juror: The Judicial Determination of Factual Issues
* 2: The Judge as Lawmaker: An English Perspective
* 3: The Discretion of the Judge
* Part II: Judges in Society
* 1: Judicial Independence
* 2: Judicial Ethics
* Part III: The Wider World
* 1: `There is a World Elsewhere': The Changing Perspectives of English
Law
* 2: Law in a Pluralist Society
* 3: The Supreme Court of India
* Part IV: Human Rights
* 1: The European Convention on Human Rights: Time to Incorporate
* 2: Should there be a Law to Protect Rights of Personal Privacy?
* 3: The Way we Live Now: Human Rights in the New Millennium
* 4: Tort and Human Rights
* Part V: Public Law
* 1: Should Public Law Remedies be Discretionary?
* 2: The Old Despotism
* 3: Mr Perlzweig, Sir John Anderson, and Lord Atkin
* Part VI: The Constitution
* 1: The Courts and the Constitution
* 2: Anglo-American Reflections
* Part VII: The English Criminal Trial
* 1: The English Criminal Trial: The Credits and the Debits
* 2: Justice and Injustice
* 3: Silence is Golden - or is it?
* 4: A Criminal Code: Must we Wait for Ever?
* Part VIII: Crime and Punishment
* 1: The Sentence of the Court
* 2: Justice for the Young
* 3: The Mandatory Life Sentence for Murder
* 4: Speech on the Second Reading of the Crime (Sentences) Bill
* Part IX: Miscellaneous
* 1: Address to the Centenary Conference of the Bar
* 2: Who Then in Law is my Neighbour?
* 3: The Future of the Common law
* 4: Lecture at Toynbee Hall on the Centenary of its Legal Advice
Centre
* 5: Address at the Thanksgiving Service for Lord Denning OM
* 1: The Judge as Juror: The Judicial Determination of Factual Issues
* 2: The Judge as Lawmaker: An English Perspective
* 3: The Discretion of the Judge
* Part II: Judges in Society
* 1: Judicial Independence
* 2: Judicial Ethics
* Part III: The Wider World
* 1: `There is a World Elsewhere': The Changing Perspectives of English
Law
* 2: Law in a Pluralist Society
* 3: The Supreme Court of India
* Part IV: Human Rights
* 1: The European Convention on Human Rights: Time to Incorporate
* 2: Should there be a Law to Protect Rights of Personal Privacy?
* 3: The Way we Live Now: Human Rights in the New Millennium
* 4: Tort and Human Rights
* Part V: Public Law
* 1: Should Public Law Remedies be Discretionary?
* 2: The Old Despotism
* 3: Mr Perlzweig, Sir John Anderson, and Lord Atkin
* Part VI: The Constitution
* 1: The Courts and the Constitution
* 2: Anglo-American Reflections
* Part VII: The English Criminal Trial
* 1: The English Criminal Trial: The Credits and the Debits
* 2: Justice and Injustice
* 3: Silence is Golden - or is it?
* 4: A Criminal Code: Must we Wait for Ever?
* Part VIII: Crime and Punishment
* 1: The Sentence of the Court
* 2: Justice for the Young
* 3: The Mandatory Life Sentence for Murder
* 4: Speech on the Second Reading of the Crime (Sentences) Bill
* Part IX: Miscellaneous
* 1: Address to the Centenary Conference of the Bar
* 2: Who Then in Law is my Neighbour?
* 3: The Future of the Common law
* 4: Lecture at Toynbee Hall on the Centenary of its Legal Advice
Centre
* 5: Address at the Thanksgiving Service for Lord Denning OM
* Part I: The Business of Judging
* 1: The Judge as Juror: The Judicial Determination of Factual Issues
* 2: The Judge as Lawmaker: An English Perspective
* 3: The Discretion of the Judge
* Part II: Judges in Society
* 1: Judicial Independence
* 2: Judicial Ethics
* Part III: The Wider World
* 1: `There is a World Elsewhere': The Changing Perspectives of English
Law
* 2: Law in a Pluralist Society
* 3: The Supreme Court of India
* Part IV: Human Rights
* 1: The European Convention on Human Rights: Time to Incorporate
* 2: Should there be a Law to Protect Rights of Personal Privacy?
* 3: The Way we Live Now: Human Rights in the New Millennium
* 4: Tort and Human Rights
* Part V: Public Law
* 1: Should Public Law Remedies be Discretionary?
* 2: The Old Despotism
* 3: Mr Perlzweig, Sir John Anderson, and Lord Atkin
* Part VI: The Constitution
* 1: The Courts and the Constitution
* 2: Anglo-American Reflections
* Part VII: The English Criminal Trial
* 1: The English Criminal Trial: The Credits and the Debits
* 2: Justice and Injustice
* 3: Silence is Golden - or is it?
* 4: A Criminal Code: Must we Wait for Ever?
* Part VIII: Crime and Punishment
* 1: The Sentence of the Court
* 2: Justice for the Young
* 3: The Mandatory Life Sentence for Murder
* 4: Speech on the Second Reading of the Crime (Sentences) Bill
* Part IX: Miscellaneous
* 1: Address to the Centenary Conference of the Bar
* 2: Who Then in Law is my Neighbour?
* 3: The Future of the Common law
* 4: Lecture at Toynbee Hall on the Centenary of its Legal Advice
Centre
* 5: Address at the Thanksgiving Service for Lord Denning OM
* 1: The Judge as Juror: The Judicial Determination of Factual Issues
* 2: The Judge as Lawmaker: An English Perspective
* 3: The Discretion of the Judge
* Part II: Judges in Society
* 1: Judicial Independence
* 2: Judicial Ethics
* Part III: The Wider World
* 1: `There is a World Elsewhere': The Changing Perspectives of English
Law
* 2: Law in a Pluralist Society
* 3: The Supreme Court of India
* Part IV: Human Rights
* 1: The European Convention on Human Rights: Time to Incorporate
* 2: Should there be a Law to Protect Rights of Personal Privacy?
* 3: The Way we Live Now: Human Rights in the New Millennium
* 4: Tort and Human Rights
* Part V: Public Law
* 1: Should Public Law Remedies be Discretionary?
* 2: The Old Despotism
* 3: Mr Perlzweig, Sir John Anderson, and Lord Atkin
* Part VI: The Constitution
* 1: The Courts and the Constitution
* 2: Anglo-American Reflections
* Part VII: The English Criminal Trial
* 1: The English Criminal Trial: The Credits and the Debits
* 2: Justice and Injustice
* 3: Silence is Golden - or is it?
* 4: A Criminal Code: Must we Wait for Ever?
* Part VIII: Crime and Punishment
* 1: The Sentence of the Court
* 2: Justice for the Young
* 3: The Mandatory Life Sentence for Murder
* 4: Speech on the Second Reading of the Crime (Sentences) Bill
* Part IX: Miscellaneous
* 1: Address to the Centenary Conference of the Bar
* 2: Who Then in Law is my Neighbour?
* 3: The Future of the Common law
* 4: Lecture at Toynbee Hall on the Centenary of its Legal Advice
Centre
* 5: Address at the Thanksgiving Service for Lord Denning OM







