Buch, Englisch, 330 Seiten
Buch, Englisch, 330 Seiten
ISBN: 978-1-009-79774-0
Verlag: Cambridge University Press & Assessment
A collection of some of the best papers presented at the 25th British Legal History Conference at Queen's University Belfast in July 2022, Law and Constitutional Change examines the role that law plays when countries experience a major constitutional upheaval. It examines the interaction of law and politics in history across different legal jurisdictions with different legal traditions. The theme of the conference was 'Law and Constitutional Change' and was inspired by the decade of anniversaries in Ireland (2012–2022) commemorating events from a century ago that began with the Home Rule Crisis and ended with the partition of the country. It studies the changes that occurred at that time in a wider British and Irish as well as international context, with a view to deepening understanding of contemporary debates such as those surrounding Brexit and its longer-term implications. This title is also available as open access on Cambridge Core.
Autoren/Hrsg.
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Editors' introduction David Capper, Conor Mccormick and N. M. Dawson; 1. 'Another sort of treason': the troubled home of husband-killing in late-medieval common law Gwen Seabourne; 2. The origins of the statute of uses A. J. Hannay; 3. Examining the doctrine of art and part in early modern Scotland Stephanie Dropuljic; 4. The beginnings of judicial review John Baker, 5. The aspirations of James Stuart Ian Ward; 6. A British common law? Public law after the 1707 union between England and Scotland Robert Brett Taylor; 7. Quo warranto and the borough office holder 1700–1791 Kevin Costello; 8. Land, credit and the constitution: debtor protections and Catholic rights in eighteenth-century Ireland Julia Rudolph; 9. Constitutional change, law, and Grattan's parliament Maike Schwiddessen; 10. Sir John Ross Bt: the last Lord chancellor of Ireland 1921–1922 Richard Mcbride; 11. Lord Birkenhead, ambiguity and the Irish border: lawyers and the Anglo-Irish treaty Colum Kenny; 12. The British-Irish negotiations on the drafting of the 1922 constitution of the Irish free state Thomas Mohr; 13. No way to run a railroad: the decline of the great Northern railway of Ireland after partition C. R. G. Murray; 14. Fortuna fortes Adiuvat: the importance of individuals in Estonian constitutional change Merike Ristikivi, Katre Luhamaa and Karin Sein; 15. First nations constitutional recognition in Australia: addressing foundational failures of rule of law Gabrielle Appleby and Megan Davis; 16. The rise and fall of the UK human rights act Brenda Hale; 17. Courting the past: reconstructing Ireland's lost legal records, c.1300–1922 Peter Crooks, Timothy Murtagh and Ciarán Wallace with Joel Herman; Index.