The Making and Re-Making of Public Law
Herausgeber: Varuhas, Jason Ne; Carolan, Eoin; Fulham-McQuillan, Sarah
The Making and Re-Making of Public Law
Herausgeber: Varuhas, Jason Ne; Carolan, Eoin; Fulham-McQuillan, Sarah
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This volume originates from the fourth Public Law Conference where leading scholars and judges presented papers on the making (and re-making) of public law.
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This volume originates from the fourth Public Law Conference where leading scholars and judges presented papers on the making (and re-making) of public law.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
- Seitenzahl: 400
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. Mai 2025
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 250mm x 175mm x 26mm
- Gewicht: 850g
- ISBN-13: 9781509970056
- ISBN-10: 1509970053
- Artikelnr.: 71162481
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
- Seitenzahl: 400
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. Mai 2025
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 250mm x 175mm x 26mm
- Gewicht: 850g
- ISBN-13: 9781509970056
- ISBN-10: 1509970053
- Artikelnr.: 71162481
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Eoin Carolan is Professor at the School of Law, University College Dublin, Ireland. Jason NE Varuhas is Professor at Melbourne Law School, University of Melbourne, Australia. Sarah Fulham-McQuillan is Assistant Professor at the School of Law, University College Dublin, Ireland.
Introduction, Eoin Carolan (University College Dublin, Ireland, Jason NE
Varuhas (University of Melbourne, Australia) and Sarah Fulham-McQuillan
(University College Dublin, Ireland)
Part I: The Making of Public Law in the Common Law World
1. A Court and the World, Donal O'Donnell (Chief Justice of Ireland)
2. The Power of Narrative - Shaping Aotearoa New Zealand's Public Law,
Helen Winkelmann (Chief Justice of New Zealand)
3. Justice Devolved - Milestones in Northern Ireland Constitutional Law
Since 2010, Siobhan Keegan (Lady Chief Justice of Northern Ireland)
4. Making and Re-Making of Public Law: The Canadian Way, Sheilah L Martin
(Supreme Court of Canada)
5. The Building of South Africa's Constitution on the Ruins of its Past:
The Remodelling of Public Law in Post-Apartheid South Africa, Steven
Majiedt (Constitutional Court of South Africa)
6. Double Act: Assessing Constitutional Entrenchment and Codification in
the Re-Making of Administrative Law in Democratic South Africa, Catherine
O'Regan (University of Oxford, UK)
7. South Africa's Transformative Constitution as 'Non-Reformist Reform'?
Nomfundo Ramalekana (University of Cape Town, South Africa)
Part II: Making Public Law in the Common Law Tradition
8. The Beginnings of Judicial Review, John Baker (University of Cambridge,
UK)
9. Good Counsel as a Constitutional Imperative, Janet McLean (University of
Auckland, New Zealand)
10. Private Rights and Public Wrongs, Brian Murray (Supreme Court of
Ireland)
11. Long Waves of Constitutional Principle in the Common Law, Philip Sales
(UK Supreme Court)
12. Why Does Ireland Have a System of Judicial Review of Legislation? The
Legacy of the Irish Free State Constitution of 1922, Gerard Hogan (Supreme
Court of Ireland)
Part III: Re-Making Public Law: Contemporary Challenges and the Future
13. Legislating for Emergencies: Insights from the Pandemic, Cheryl
Saunders (University of Melbourne, Australia)
14. Administrative Law and the Pandemic, Gillian E Metzger (University of
Columbia, USA)
15. Populism and Administrative Law, Carol Harlow (London School of
Economics, UK) and Richard Rawlings (University College London, UK)
16. Populism and Constitutional Democracy: Feature or Bug? Neil Walker
(University of Edinburgh, UK)
17. 'You Can't Go Home Again': Constitutional Fidelity and Change in
Post-Brexit Britain, Colm Ó Cinnéide (University College London, UK)
18. Public Faces: Indigenous Law Today and Through the Futuristic Looking
Glass, Val Napoleon (University of Victoria, Canada)
19. Public Law and the Future: A Sustainable Jurisprudence? Peter C Oliver
(University of Ottowa, Canada)
Varuhas (University of Melbourne, Australia) and Sarah Fulham-McQuillan
(University College Dublin, Ireland)
Part I: The Making of Public Law in the Common Law World
1. A Court and the World, Donal O'Donnell (Chief Justice of Ireland)
2. The Power of Narrative - Shaping Aotearoa New Zealand's Public Law,
Helen Winkelmann (Chief Justice of New Zealand)
3. Justice Devolved - Milestones in Northern Ireland Constitutional Law
Since 2010, Siobhan Keegan (Lady Chief Justice of Northern Ireland)
4. Making and Re-Making of Public Law: The Canadian Way, Sheilah L Martin
(Supreme Court of Canada)
5. The Building of South Africa's Constitution on the Ruins of its Past:
The Remodelling of Public Law in Post-Apartheid South Africa, Steven
Majiedt (Constitutional Court of South Africa)
6. Double Act: Assessing Constitutional Entrenchment and Codification in
the Re-Making of Administrative Law in Democratic South Africa, Catherine
O'Regan (University of Oxford, UK)
7. South Africa's Transformative Constitution as 'Non-Reformist Reform'?
Nomfundo Ramalekana (University of Cape Town, South Africa)
Part II: Making Public Law in the Common Law Tradition
8. The Beginnings of Judicial Review, John Baker (University of Cambridge,
UK)
9. Good Counsel as a Constitutional Imperative, Janet McLean (University of
Auckland, New Zealand)
10. Private Rights and Public Wrongs, Brian Murray (Supreme Court of
Ireland)
11. Long Waves of Constitutional Principle in the Common Law, Philip Sales
(UK Supreme Court)
12. Why Does Ireland Have a System of Judicial Review of Legislation? The
Legacy of the Irish Free State Constitution of 1922, Gerard Hogan (Supreme
Court of Ireland)
Part III: Re-Making Public Law: Contemporary Challenges and the Future
13. Legislating for Emergencies: Insights from the Pandemic, Cheryl
Saunders (University of Melbourne, Australia)
14. Administrative Law and the Pandemic, Gillian E Metzger (University of
Columbia, USA)
15. Populism and Administrative Law, Carol Harlow (London School of
Economics, UK) and Richard Rawlings (University College London, UK)
16. Populism and Constitutional Democracy: Feature or Bug? Neil Walker
(University of Edinburgh, UK)
17. 'You Can't Go Home Again': Constitutional Fidelity and Change in
Post-Brexit Britain, Colm Ó Cinnéide (University College London, UK)
18. Public Faces: Indigenous Law Today and Through the Futuristic Looking
Glass, Val Napoleon (University of Victoria, Canada)
19. Public Law and the Future: A Sustainable Jurisprudence? Peter C Oliver
(University of Ottowa, Canada)
Introduction, Eoin Carolan (University College Dublin, Ireland, Jason NE
Varuhas (University of Melbourne, Australia) and Sarah Fulham-McQuillan
(University College Dublin, Ireland)
Part I: The Making of Public Law in the Common Law World
1. A Court and the World, Donal O'Donnell (Chief Justice of Ireland)
2. The Power of Narrative - Shaping Aotearoa New Zealand's Public Law,
Helen Winkelmann (Chief Justice of New Zealand)
3. Justice Devolved - Milestones in Northern Ireland Constitutional Law
Since 2010, Siobhan Keegan (Lady Chief Justice of Northern Ireland)
4. Making and Re-Making of Public Law: The Canadian Way, Sheilah L Martin
(Supreme Court of Canada)
5. The Building of South Africa's Constitution on the Ruins of its Past:
The Remodelling of Public Law in Post-Apartheid South Africa, Steven
Majiedt (Constitutional Court of South Africa)
6. Double Act: Assessing Constitutional Entrenchment and Codification in
the Re-Making of Administrative Law in Democratic South Africa, Catherine
O'Regan (University of Oxford, UK)
7. South Africa's Transformative Constitution as 'Non-Reformist Reform'?
Nomfundo Ramalekana (University of Cape Town, South Africa)
Part II: Making Public Law in the Common Law Tradition
8. The Beginnings of Judicial Review, John Baker (University of Cambridge,
UK)
9. Good Counsel as a Constitutional Imperative, Janet McLean (University of
Auckland, New Zealand)
10. Private Rights and Public Wrongs, Brian Murray (Supreme Court of
Ireland)
11. Long Waves of Constitutional Principle in the Common Law, Philip Sales
(UK Supreme Court)
12. Why Does Ireland Have a System of Judicial Review of Legislation? The
Legacy of the Irish Free State Constitution of 1922, Gerard Hogan (Supreme
Court of Ireland)
Part III: Re-Making Public Law: Contemporary Challenges and the Future
13. Legislating for Emergencies: Insights from the Pandemic, Cheryl
Saunders (University of Melbourne, Australia)
14. Administrative Law and the Pandemic, Gillian E Metzger (University of
Columbia, USA)
15. Populism and Administrative Law, Carol Harlow (London School of
Economics, UK) and Richard Rawlings (University College London, UK)
16. Populism and Constitutional Democracy: Feature or Bug? Neil Walker
(University of Edinburgh, UK)
17. 'You Can't Go Home Again': Constitutional Fidelity and Change in
Post-Brexit Britain, Colm Ó Cinnéide (University College London, UK)
18. Public Faces: Indigenous Law Today and Through the Futuristic Looking
Glass, Val Napoleon (University of Victoria, Canada)
19. Public Law and the Future: A Sustainable Jurisprudence? Peter C Oliver
(University of Ottowa, Canada)
Varuhas (University of Melbourne, Australia) and Sarah Fulham-McQuillan
(University College Dublin, Ireland)
Part I: The Making of Public Law in the Common Law World
1. A Court and the World, Donal O'Donnell (Chief Justice of Ireland)
2. The Power of Narrative - Shaping Aotearoa New Zealand's Public Law,
Helen Winkelmann (Chief Justice of New Zealand)
3. Justice Devolved - Milestones in Northern Ireland Constitutional Law
Since 2010, Siobhan Keegan (Lady Chief Justice of Northern Ireland)
4. Making and Re-Making of Public Law: The Canadian Way, Sheilah L Martin
(Supreme Court of Canada)
5. The Building of South Africa's Constitution on the Ruins of its Past:
The Remodelling of Public Law in Post-Apartheid South Africa, Steven
Majiedt (Constitutional Court of South Africa)
6. Double Act: Assessing Constitutional Entrenchment and Codification in
the Re-Making of Administrative Law in Democratic South Africa, Catherine
O'Regan (University of Oxford, UK)
7. South Africa's Transformative Constitution as 'Non-Reformist Reform'?
Nomfundo Ramalekana (University of Cape Town, South Africa)
Part II: Making Public Law in the Common Law Tradition
8. The Beginnings of Judicial Review, John Baker (University of Cambridge,
UK)
9. Good Counsel as a Constitutional Imperative, Janet McLean (University of
Auckland, New Zealand)
10. Private Rights and Public Wrongs, Brian Murray (Supreme Court of
Ireland)
11. Long Waves of Constitutional Principle in the Common Law, Philip Sales
(UK Supreme Court)
12. Why Does Ireland Have a System of Judicial Review of Legislation? The
Legacy of the Irish Free State Constitution of 1922, Gerard Hogan (Supreme
Court of Ireland)
Part III: Re-Making Public Law: Contemporary Challenges and the Future
13. Legislating for Emergencies: Insights from the Pandemic, Cheryl
Saunders (University of Melbourne, Australia)
14. Administrative Law and the Pandemic, Gillian E Metzger (University of
Columbia, USA)
15. Populism and Administrative Law, Carol Harlow (London School of
Economics, UK) and Richard Rawlings (University College London, UK)
16. Populism and Constitutional Democracy: Feature or Bug? Neil Walker
(University of Edinburgh, UK)
17. 'You Can't Go Home Again': Constitutional Fidelity and Change in
Post-Brexit Britain, Colm Ó Cinnéide (University College London, UK)
18. Public Faces: Indigenous Law Today and Through the Futuristic Looking
Glass, Val Napoleon (University of Victoria, Canada)
19. Public Law and the Future: A Sustainable Jurisprudence? Peter C Oliver
(University of Ottowa, Canada)







