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The Sovereignty of Law T.R.S. Allan (Professor of Jurisprudence and Public Law, University of Cambridge, and Fellow of Pembroke College, Cambridge)

The Sovereignty of Law By T.R.S. Allan (Professor of Jurisprudence and Public Law, University of Cambridge, and Fellow of Pembroke College, Cambridge)

Summary

An original account of the British constitution, this book explains how the requirements of constitutional law depend on underlying considerations of legal and political theory and defends an account of the British constitution as a source of individual freedom, grounded in a persuasive interpretation of the common law constitutional tradition.

The Sovereignty of Law Summary

The Sovereignty of Law: Freedom, Constitution, and Common Law by T.R.S. Allan (Professor of Jurisprudence and Public Law, University of Cambridge, and Fellow of Pembroke College, Cambridge)

In The Sovereignty of Law, Trevor Allan presents an accessible introduction to his influential common law constitutional theory - an account of the unwritten constitution as a complex articulation of legal and moral principles. The British constitution is conceived as a coherent set of fundamental principles of the rule of law, legislative supremacy, and separation of powers. These principles combine to provide an overarching unity of legality, legitimacy, and democracy, reconciling political authority with individual freedom. Drawing on the work of Lon Fuller and Ronald Dworkin, Allan emphasizes the normative character of legal interpretation - understanding the implications of statute and precedent by reference to moral ideals of legality and liberty. Allan denies that constitutional law can be reduced to empirical facts about legislative or judicial conduct or opinion. There is no 'rule of recognition' from the lawyer's interpretative viewpoint - only a moral theory of the nature and limits of political authority, which lawyers must construct in order to make sense of legal and constitutional practice. A genuine republicanism, protecting individual independence, requires the safeguards afforded by judicial review, which must ensure that governmental action is consistent with the rule of law; and the rule of law encompasses not merely the formal equality of all before the law, as enacted or declared, but a more fundamental idea of equal citizenship. Allan's interpretative approach is applied to a wide range of contemporary issues of public law; his response to critics and commentators seeks to deepen the argument by exploring the theoretical grounds of these current debates and controversies.

The Sovereignty of Law Reviews

In his latest book, The Sovereignty of Law . . . Allan takes both his critique of orthodoxy and his own rule of law thesis to a new level of cogency and philosophical rigour. Whether or not one agrees with his arguments, it is a tremendous accomplishment. . . . [T]he defining strength of Allan's work . . . is his ability to weave together complex debates in legal and political theory with detailed doctrinal analyses of cases, statutes and contemporary constitutional developments. That strategy . . . is central to his methodological and substantive commitments. * Stuart Lakin, UK Constitutional Law Blog *
. . . Allan has here captured the zeitgeist-his is a book capable of rationalising two decades of constitutional development in a fashion likely, in turn, to influence public law's evolution in years to come. Notable in this regard is his continued allegiance to common law constitutionalism and concomitant insistence that the Human Rights Act 1998 merely augments the values of the common law. As such, the book's methodological prescription applies even more clearly (and more urgently) if that statutory surface is swept away and the common law left to speak for itself. * Paul Scott, Law Quarterly Review *

About T.R.S. Allan (Professor of Jurisprudence and Public Law, University of Cambridge, and Fellow of Pembroke College, Cambridge)

Trevor Allan has taught public law and legal philosophy at the University of Cambridge since 1985. He is a leading proponent of the approach to public law known as common law constitutionalism, which identifies the foundations of the British and other Commonwealth constitutions with fundamental principles of legality and freedom, underpinning and informing the common law. He is a persistent and incisive critic of approaches to public law rooted in legal positivism, which locate constitutional foundations in the conventions observed (or opinions held) by senior officials. He is the author of Law, Liberty, and Justice (1993) and Constitutional Justice (2001).

Table of Contents

Introduction 1: Constitution and Constitutionalism 2: Constitutional Convention: Practice and Principle 3: The Rule of Law: Freedom, Law and Justice 4: Parliamentary Sovereignty: Authority and Autonomy 5: Legislative Supremacy and the Rule of Law 6: Constitutional Foundations of Judicial Review 7: Judicial Review and Judicial Restraint 8: Democracy, Fundamental Rights and Common Law Appendix: Public Law and Political Theory

Additional information

GOR013743290
9780199685073
019968507X
The Sovereignty of Law: Freedom, Constitution, and Common Law by T.R.S. Allan (Professor of Jurisprudence and Public Law, University of Cambridge, and Fellow of Pembroke College, Cambridge)
Used - Like New
Paperback
Oxford University Press
2015-06-18
370
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
The book has been read, but looks new. The book cover has no visible wear, and the dust jacket is included if applicable. No missing or damaged pages, no tears, possible very minimal creasing, no underlining or highlighting of text, and no writing in the margins

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