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Oxford Journal of Legal Studies, Volume 20,
Issue 1, pp. 131-154: Abstract.
Sovereignty re-examined: the courts, parliament,
and statutes
NW Barber
Brasenose College, Oxford, UK
In this article the relationship between
Parliament and courts is examined. The views of writers on sovereignty are
considered and criticized. Two criticisms of the sovereignty theorists are
made: first, that they wrongly assume that a legal system must attribute
supreme legal power to a single source and, second, that they wrongly assume
that statutes in the English system constitute absolute exclusionary reasons
for decision. It is contended that legal systems, can, and the English
Constitution does, contain multiple unranked sources of law. Hart's rule of
recognition and Kelsen's Grundnorm are considered and compared, and found to be
insufficiently flexible to meet the realities of the English Constitution. A
more complicated model of judicial reactions to statutes is proposed, and
decisions of the judges that run contrary to the law as set down in the statute
are considered. It is contended that the relationship of the courts to
Parliament ought not to be considered a purely legal issue; it also has a political
dimension.
Oxford Journal of Legal Studies, Volume 20,
Issue 2, pp. 185-204: Abstract.
Constitutive Rights
ERIC J MITNICK
Department of Politics, Printeton University
Prevailing accounts of the relationship between
rights and identity impose a false choice between conceptions of rights as the
instrument of self-invention or the foil to collective virtue. This article
proposes an alternative conception of rights as constitutive of social
relations and aspects of individual identity. To do so, it draws on H. L. A.
Hart's famous distinction between special and general rights, and it describes
the exclusionary and inclusionary conditions under which these forms of right
constitute social groups and self-meaning. Further, it specifies a pure form of
«constitutive right», overlooked in Hart's typology, but extant in modern
liberal, pluralistic societies, that inherently differentiates among persons
and so directly constitutes aspects of human identity.
Oxford Journal of Legal Studies, Volume 20,
Issue 4, pp. 499-532: Abstract.
Common Law of Human Rights?: Transnational
Judicial Conversations on Constitutional Rights
CHRISTOPHER McCRUDDEN
Professor of Human Rights Law, Oxford University
It is now commonplace in many jurisdictions for
judges to refer to the decisions of the courts of foreign jurisdictions when
interpreting domestic human rights guarantees. But there has also been a persistent
undercurrent of scepticism about this trend, and the emergence of a growing
debate about its appropriateness. This issue is of particular relevance in
jurisdictions that have relatively recently incorporated human rights
provisions that are significantly judicially enforced. In the UK, a
reconsideration of the use of comparative judicial decisions in human rights
cases is therefore particularly timely. The interpretation of the Human Rights
Act 1998 will bring with it the issue of how far British courts will (and/or
should) use jurisprudence from other countries in order to help in arriving at
decisions on the interpretation of the Act. This article raises for debate,
therefore, the meaning and significance of national judges» citation of
judgments from other jurisdictions as part of their reasoning in cases with a
significant human (or constitutional) rights aspect. Several questions are
identified and explored in an attempt to consider various aspects of the
general phenomenon. These include empirical questions (how far does it happen,
and where?), jurisprudential questions (can we identify criteria that help
explain why it does or does not happen?), and normative questions (is it
legitimate?). A review of the existing literature is undertaken with a view to
determining how far scholars have succeeded in answering these questions. The
article concludes that significant gaps exist in our understanding of the
phenomenon and raises for discussion the methodologies that may be appropriate
for addressing the phenomenon in the future.
Oxford Journal of Legal Studies, Volume 21,
Issue 2, pp. 287-310: Abstract.
Democracy, Governance and Governmentality: Civic
Public Space and Constitutional Renewal in Northern Ireland
John Morison
School of Law, Queen's University, Belfast
This article seeks to make some general points
about the changing nature of constitutionalism by looking critically at the
constitutional architecture of the Northern Ireland Act 1998. It argues that
despite their sophistication the structures of settlement in Northern Ireland
do not address fully the fundamental issues of the changing nature of power and
the ethical character of constitutional transformation. The argument draws upon
the governmentality approach associated with work developing the later writings
of Michel Foucault to consider the nature of government and of multi-level and
multi-form governance. In particular, the account reviews briefly the
settlement structures and suggests that the role of government may have changed
since last there was devolution in Northern Ireland. Next the history of
involvement of the voluntary sector in governance in the Northern Ireland
context is outlined to indicate its particular potential for development.
Finally, the positive advantages of opening up a new democratic space through
developing the role of civil society in the processes of governance are
reviewed and the value of a constitutional renewal project is considered.