000 03132cam a2200217 i 4500
999 _c2952
_d2952
008 141201s2015 enk b 001 0 eng
020 _a9781107680630
082 0 0 _a342.085 LEC
_223
100 1 _aLeckey, Robert
245 1 0 _aBills of rights in the common law
260 _aUnited Kingdom
_bCambridge University Press
_c2015
300 _a237p
490 0 _aCambridge studies in constitutional law
504 _aIncludes bibliographical references (pages 199-220) and index.
505 8 _aMachine generated contents note: Introduction; Against Bill of Rights exceptionalism; The common law, judging, and three Bills of Rights; Judicial review of legislation before Bills of Rights; Bills of Rights and other means of accessing judgment; Putting the strike-down in its place; Remedies from text to practice; Improving the system and engaging the legislature; Rethinking remedies and constitutional supremacy; Conclusion.
520 _a"Scholars have addressed at length the 'what' of judicial review under a bill of rights - scrutinizing legislation and striking it down - but neglected the 'how'. Adopting an internal legal perspective, Robert Leckey addresses that gap by reporting on the processes and activities of judges of the highest courts of Canada, South Africa and the United Kingdom as they apply their relatively new bills of rights. Rejecting the tendency to view rights adjudication as novel and unique, he connects it to the tradition of judging and judicial review in the Commonwealth and identifies respects in which judges' activities in rights cases genuinely are novel - and problematic. Highlighting inventiveness in rights adjudication, including creative remedies and guidance to legislative drafters, he challenges classifications of review as strong or weak. Disputing claims that it is modest and dialogic, he also argues that remedial discretion denies justice to individuals and undermines constitutional supremacy"--
520 _a"Scholars have addressed at length the 'what' of judicial review under a bill of rights - scrutinizing legislation and striking it down - but neglected the 'how'. Adopting an internal legal perspective, Robert Leckey addresses that gap by reporting on the processes and activities of judges of the highest courts of Canada, South Africa, and the United Kingdom as they apply their relatively new bills of rights. Rejecting the tendency to view rights adjudication as novel and unique, he connects it to the tradition of judging and judicial review in the Commonwealth and identifies respects in which judges' activities in rights cases genuinely are novel - and problematic. Highlighting inventiveness in rights adjudication, including creative remedies and guidance to legislative drafters, he challenges classifications of review as strong or weak. Disputing claims that it is modest and dialogic, he also argues that remedial discretion denies justice to individuals and undermines constitutional supremacy"--
650 0 _aConstitutional and Administrative Law
856 4 2 _uhttp://assets.cambridge.org/97811070/38530/cover/9781107038530.jpg
942 _cBK