Wildy Logo
(020) 7242 5778
enquiries@wildy.com

Book of the Month

Cover of Spencer Bower and Handley: Res Judicata

Spencer Bower and Handley: Res Judicata

Price: £449.99

Lord Denning: Life, Law and Legacy



  


Welcome to Wildys

Watch


NEW EDITION Pre-order The Law of Rights of Light 2nd ed



 Jonathan Karas


Offers for Newly Called Barristers & Students

Special Discounts for Newly Called & Students

Read More ...


Secondhand & Out of Print

Browse Secondhand Online

Read More...


Public Law in a Troubled Era: A Tribute to Professor Patrick Birkinshaw

Edited by: Katarzyna Gromek-Broc

ISBN13: 9789403535760
Published: June 2023
Publisher: Kluwer Law International
Country of Publication: Netherlands
Format: Hardback
Price: £124.00



Low stock.

Also available as

Public Law in a Troubled Era is a compendium of edited essays wherein many of the world’s leading public lawyers draw on examples from the United Kingdom, European States, and the European Union (EU) to explore the alarming tensions unleashed as Europe is rocked by Brexit, the war between nations on the EU border, and the worldwide phenomenon of populist resistance to globalised forces and liberal democratic aspirations. Public law, which examines relations between governments and institutions and individuals, has, in recent years, become deeply disturbed by an erosion of the rule of law, notably in some of the world’s most professedly democratic nations.

The book is dedicated to Professor Patrick Birkinshaw, who until his retirement was Director of the Institute of European Public Law and Professor of Public Law at the University of Hull and widely respected as a leading authority on public law. With a focus on public law and European public law jurisprudence with hugely important global ramifications, the contributions continue his work and crucially deal with the new and troubling shape of the law–politics relationship. The essays examine these developments under four headings:

  • Law in a World Turned Upside/Down, with essays on (e.g.) Brexit, the denial of human rights and the rule of law in Hungary, climate change governance
  • Law and Politics: A Shifting Boundary?, showing how advances in the courts have prompted reaction to curtail judicial review and human rights protection, especially evident in the fading mirage of fair trial rights and administration on the EU periphery
  • Law’s Promise, specifying real achievements in the way of reform and higher levels of security for individuals, and
  • New Bearings, exploring initiatives and emerging problems, including reform of judicial review, the European Banking Law, digitalization of public administration, and institutional interactions with the Chinese 1982 Constitution

The book brings together leading university professors, public officials and judges, all experts in their respective fields. All are concerned with a central role for law in the process of governance.

This unrivalled volume penetrates the contradictions, uncertainties, and insecurities that plague this topic of worldwide interest and debate, and will prove invaluable to practitioners, public administrators, jurists, judges and legal academics everywhere. It will also be of interest to political scientists and politicians. In its completely original and innovative discussions of the changes taking place at the interface of law and politics, and of how law can enhance certainty and reliability in governance, this book provides a most detailed and insightful analysis of the new bearings in public law in Europe and worldwide.

Subjects:
Constitutional and Administrative Law, EU Law
Contents:
Foreword
Patrick Birkinshaw: His Work
Introduction

PART I: Law in a World Turned Upside/Down
CHAPTER 1. Reflections on the Post-Brexit Constitution
Tony Prosser
CHAPTER 2. The Rebirth of Parliamentary Sovereignty
Gordon Anthony
CHAPTER 3. Through the Looking Glass: The Subversion of Democracy, Human Rights and the Rule of Law in Hungary
Stephen I. Pogany
CHAPTER 4. Is There a Concept of Law of Exception in France? Some Reflections on the Legal Issues Raised by the COVID-19 Pandemic
Jacques Ziller
CHAPTER 5. Climate Change: Turning the World (and Public Law) Upside-Down
Carmen Plaza
CHAPTER 6. EU Constitutional Principles Revisited in the Polish Crisis of the Judiciary
Katarzyna Gromek-Broc
CHAPTER 7. Reflections on the Francovich Remedy
Martina Künnecke McClean

PART II: Law and Politics: A Shifting Boundary?
CHAPTER 8. Law and Politics: Standing on Shifting Sand
Alison Young
CHAPTER 9. Ethical Standards Between Politics and Law
Yseult Marique
CHAPTER 10. How European Is French Public Law?
John Bell
CHAPTER 11. The Boundaries Between Law and Politics in French Administrative Law: The Case of the ‘Actes de Gouvernement’
Aurélien Antoine
CHAPTER 12. Les cours suprêmes dans l’espace juridique européen: Hommage à Patrick Birkinshaw
Bernard Stirn
CHAPTER 13. Ius Publicum Europaeum and the Use of Comparative Law by the CJEU: Unity in Diversity?
Constantinos Kombos
CHAPTER 14. The Right to Judicial Protection and Administration on the EU Periphery: The Fading Mirage of European Legal Convergence
Marton Varju
CHAPTER 15. Preliminary Rulings and Acte Clair: National Courts, Advocate General and CJEU
Paul Craig
CHAPTER 16. Is Democracy Sufficiently Safeguarded under the UK’s Unwritten Constitution?
Sir Jeffrey Jowell

PART III: Law’s Promise
CHAPTER 17. Why Also the ECJ Needs to Be Controlled?
Peter M. Huber
CHAPTER 18. The Guardianship of the Constitution and Its Legitimacy
Massimo La Torre
CHAPTER 19. Russia’s Expulsion from the CoE: The CoE’s Reaction to Russia’s Non-compliance: Rethinking the System in Light of Human Rights Protection and Accountability
Katarzyna Gromek-Broc & Anna Fachinetti
CHAPTER 20. The Contribution of the Sub-national Authorities to the EU Legality: The Evolution of Article 263 TFEU
Fabio Giglioni
CHAPTER 21. The Lisbon Treaty and EU Democracy: A Brief Assessment of Selected Areas
Nikos Vogiatzis
CHAPTER 22. Reasons to Be Grateful?: Government, Information and the Development of the Law in the United Kingdom
Mike Varney
CHAPTER 23. Whistleblowing, Freedom of Expression and the Public’s ‘Right to Know’ in the ECHR
Dimitrios Kagiaros

New Bearings
CHAPTER 24. ‘Courts in Federal Systems’
Stephen Tierney
CHAPTER 25. Consultations, Politics and Reform of Judicial Review
David Feldman
CHAPTER 26. State Aid in the Prism of Public Interests for a Renewed Approach
Mario P. Chiti
CHAPTER 27. Regulate the Use of Algorithms in the Administration: Why? How?
Jean-Bernard Auby
CHAPTER 28. Digital Transition of Public Administration in Italy and the EU Right to a Good Administration: Problems and Prospects Also in the Perspective of the Implementation of Italy’s Recovery and Resilience Plan
Diana-Urania Galetta
CHAPTER 29. The European Offices of the UK Local Authorities and Devolved Administrations in Light of Patrick Birkinshaw’s Concept of European Public Law
Carlo Panara
CHAPTER 30. Implementing China’s Constitution: Democratic Dialogue Model and Its Limitations
Zheng Zhu
CHAPTER 31. The CJEU and Comparative law in the Creation of New Jurisprudential Principles: A Case of Judicial Manipulation?
Thomas Perroud
CHAPTER 32. How to Spend (Our) Money Wisely: The SCA and Control of Public Tax and Spend in a Post-Brexit United Kingdom
Andrea Biondi & Maria Kendrick