A Simple Common Lawyer: Essays in Honour of Michael Taggart
Editat de David Dyzenhaus, Murray Hunt, Grant Huscroften Limba Engleză Hardback – 5 feb 2009
Preț: 557.05 lei
Preț vechi: 838.57 lei
-34%
Puncte Express: 836
Preț estimativ în valută:
98.62€ • 114.83$ • 85.67£
98.62€ • 114.83$ • 85.67£
Carte tipărită la comandă
Livrare economică 24 februarie-10 martie
Preluare comenzi: 021 569.72.76
Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781841139234
ISBN-10: 1841139238
Pagini: 346
Dimensiuni: 164 x 236 x 26 mm
Greutate: 0.68 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Hart Publishing
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1841139238
Pagini: 346
Dimensiuni: 164 x 236 x 26 mm
Greutate: 0.68 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Hart Publishing
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Cuprins
1. Introduction Grant Huscroft, David Dyzenhaus and Murray Hunt
2. Process, Quality and Variable Standards: Responding to an Agent Provocateur Mark Aronson
3. The Legitimacy of the Rule of Law David Dyzenhaus
4. Righting Administrative Law Sian Elias
5. The 'Hidden Paw' of the State and the Publicisation of Private Law Carol Harlow
6. Against Bifurcation Murray Hunt
7. 'You Say You Want a Revolution': Bills of Rights in the Age of Human Rights Grant Huscroft and Paul Rishworth
8. Why the History of English Administrative Law is not Written Martin Loughlin
9. Mike Taggart and Australian Exceptionalism Sir Anthony Mason
10. Public Function Tests: Bringing Back the State? Janet McLean
11. A History of the Modern Jurisprudence of Aboriginal Rights - Some Observations on the Journey So Far P G McHugh
12. 'Because I Said So!' Is That Ever Good Enough?-Findings and Reasons in Canadian Administrative Law David Mullan
13. To Be or Not to Be: The Constitutional Relationship Between New Zealand and Australia Cheryl Saunders
14. Early Days Sir Stephen Sedley
15. The Killing of the Prisoners at Agincourt and a Movement from Contract to Status A W B Simpson
The Writings of Michael Taggart
David Dyzenhaus
Murray Hunt
Grant Huscroft
Cheryl Saunders
Mark Aronson
David Mullan
Paul Rishworth
Paul McHugh
Janet McLean
Brian Simpson
Carol Harlow
Martin Loughlin
Justice Stephen Sedley
Chief Justice Sian Elias
Chief Justice Anthony Maso
2. Process, Quality and Variable Standards: Responding to an Agent Provocateur Mark Aronson
3. The Legitimacy of the Rule of Law David Dyzenhaus
4. Righting Administrative Law Sian Elias
5. The 'Hidden Paw' of the State and the Publicisation of Private Law Carol Harlow
6. Against Bifurcation Murray Hunt
7. 'You Say You Want a Revolution': Bills of Rights in the Age of Human Rights Grant Huscroft and Paul Rishworth
8. Why the History of English Administrative Law is not Written Martin Loughlin
9. Mike Taggart and Australian Exceptionalism Sir Anthony Mason
10. Public Function Tests: Bringing Back the State? Janet McLean
11. A History of the Modern Jurisprudence of Aboriginal Rights - Some Observations on the Journey So Far P G McHugh
12. 'Because I Said So!' Is That Ever Good Enough?-Findings and Reasons in Canadian Administrative Law David Mullan
13. To Be or Not to Be: The Constitutional Relationship Between New Zealand and Australia Cheryl Saunders
14. Early Days Sir Stephen Sedley
15. The Killing of the Prisoners at Agincourt and a Movement from Contract to Status A W B Simpson
The Writings of Michael Taggart
David Dyzenhaus
Murray Hunt
Grant Huscroft
Cheryl Saunders
Mark Aronson
David Mullan
Paul Rishworth
Paul McHugh
Janet McLean
Brian Simpson
Carol Harlow
Martin Loughlin
Justice Stephen Sedley
Chief Justice Sian Elias
Chief Justice Anthony Maso
Recenzii
...the scholarly contributions of the cartographers in this lovingly assembled book are a testament to Michael Taggart's incomparable mapping skills in the landscape of administrative law. A Simple Common Lawyer is an impressive and richly deserved tribute to one of the titans of Commonwealth public law: it functions as a fantastic primer, rather than substitute, for Taggart's voracious writings and exemplifies the enduring virtues of the festschrift genre.The obvious diversity yet underlying unity of the subjectmatter contained within the volume is an apt reflection of a scholar who has resolutely demonstrated that a culture of justification should operate in academia aswell as in public administration.
To the extent that it is possible for one volume to reflect the depth and variety of Taggart's scholarship, this volume succeeds admirably and does so in large part because the contributions draw upon many of the themes or arguments that vexed Taggart. This book reflects the work of the person it honours in another way. It is about big ideas and examines difficult questions that do not have easy answers. The result is a strong work that covers complex issues and does so in a thoughtful and often provocative way. The sharp comparative focus of the book will lift readers out of the confines of their own jurisdiction to a wider range of ideas about administrative law.
the volumes provide a wide audience for many erudite and deserving papers. They provide an oppurtunity for public lawyers to dip in to other jurisdictions and to identify commonalities and the helpful foreign reference.
A Simple Common Lawyer will appeal not just to those in the legal community but to anyone wishing to understand how public law works or critically consider how it should work.
A fitting tribute to Professor Taggart, A Simple Common Lawyer offers an insightful, engaging, and diverse collection of essays any publi law enthusiast will thoroughly enjoy wading through.
To a large extent, it is the intellectual gratitude expressed by its architects that make the book a celebration, a fest, of public law scholarship, a rich source of inspiration to reflect, research, and write on the challenges that lay ahead. It is an uncommon book for a simple, albeit uncommon, common lawyer, one we can easily imagine surfing somewhere on Superman's cape, in a thunder of laughter.
To the extent that it is possible for one volume to reflect the depth and variety of Taggart's scholarship, this volume succeeds admirably and does so in large part because the contributions draw upon many of the themes or arguments that vexed Taggart. This book reflects the work of the person it honours in another way. It is about big ideas and examines difficult questions that do not have easy answers. The result is a strong work that covers complex issues and does so in a thoughtful and often provocative way. The sharp comparative focus of the book will lift readers out of the confines of their own jurisdiction to a wider range of ideas about administrative law.
the volumes provide a wide audience for many erudite and deserving papers. They provide an oppurtunity for public lawyers to dip in to other jurisdictions and to identify commonalities and the helpful foreign reference.
A Simple Common Lawyer will appeal not just to those in the legal community but to anyone wishing to understand how public law works or critically consider how it should work.
A fitting tribute to Professor Taggart, A Simple Common Lawyer offers an insightful, engaging, and diverse collection of essays any publi law enthusiast will thoroughly enjoy wading through.
To a large extent, it is the intellectual gratitude expressed by its architects that make the book a celebration, a fest, of public law scholarship, a rich source of inspiration to reflect, research, and write on the challenges that lay ahead. It is an uncommon book for a simple, albeit uncommon, common lawyer, one we can easily imagine surfing somewhere on Superman's cape, in a thunder of laughter.