Constitutional law, administrative law, and human rights: a critical introduction
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1. Verfasser: | |
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Oxford
Oxford Univ. Press
2015
|
Ausgabe: | 7. ed. |
Schlagworte: | |
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Beschreibung: | XLIV, 796 S. |
ISBN: | 9780198709039 |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | Detailed Contents
Table of Legislation
xxiii
Table of Treaties and Conventions
xxxi
Table of Cases
xxxiii
i ľ
Theoretical Principles
1
Definingthe Constitution?
3
I. The meaning(s) of democracy ?
4
What is democratic governance? Some hypothetical examples
5
A constitution as a social and
politica!
contract?
7
II. The first modern constitution?
9
The problem-majontarianism
10
The solutions-representative government, federalism, a separation of powers,
and supra-legislative fundamental rights
10
Conclusion
19
Suggested further reading
20
Academic and political commentary
20
Case law and legislation
20
2
Parliamentary Sovereignty
21
Рге-Іббб—
natural or divine law
21
The Diceyan (or orthodox) theory
22
The political source of parliamentary sovereignty-the glorious revolution
24
I. Legal authority for the principle of parliamentary sovereignty
29
Substance or procedure? The enrolled Bill rule
30
The doctrine of implied repea!
31
Inconsistency with international law
32
II. Entrenching legislation-challenges to the orthodox position
34
Jennings critique and the rule of recognition
35
Is parliamentary sovereignty a British or English concept?
43
Women s enfranchisement
47
Conclusion
48
Suggested further reading
49
Academic and political commentary
49
Case law and legislation
49
DETAILED CONTENTS
The Rule of Law and the Separation of Powers
50
I. The Diceyan perspective: the rule of law in the pre-welfare state
50
Entick
v
Camngton
(1765) 52
Dicey s rule of law—process or substance?
53
The independence of thejudiciary
54
II. The rule of law in the welfare state
56
Hayek—the road to serfdom
57
Jones—the rule of law in the welfare state
57
Red light and green light theories
59
III. Judicial regulation of government behaviour: the constitutional rationale
59
IV. Principles of statutory interpretation
62
The literal rule
63
The golden rule
66
The mischief rule
67
Purposive
(or teleologicaľ)
interpretation
68
Liversidge
v
Anderson
(1942) 69
Rv IRC, ex
ρ
Rossminster Ltd
(1980) 72
Conclusion
73
V. Stare decisis
74
The London Tramways judgment
(1898) 74
The
1966
Practice Statement
75
VI. Parliamentary sovereignty
ν
the rule of law
76
Ouster clauses-
Gilmore
(1957)
and Anisminic
(1969) 76
VII.
Retrospective law-making
78
Retrospectivity in legislation—the War Damage Act
1965 79
Retrospectivity at common law? Rape within marriage and conspiracy
to corrupt public morals
80
Retrospective or prospective Overruling?
84
Conclusion
85
Suggested further reading
85
Academic and political commentary
85
Case law and legislation
86
The Royal Prerogative
87
The source of prerogative powers
87
Post
1688—
the revolutionary settlement
92
I. The relationship between statute, the prerogative, and the rule of law
94
Re Petition of Right
(1915) 94
The
Zamora
(1915) 95
The superiority of statute over prerogative:
А
-G
ν
De Keyser s
Royal Hotel Ltd
(1920) 95
Extending
De
Keyser: Laker Airways Ltd.
ν
Department of Trade
(1977) 99
Extending Laker:
R v
Secretary of State for the Home Department,
exp
Fire
Brigades Union
(1995) 100
DETAILED
CONTENTS xi
II. The traditional perspective on judicial review of prerogative
powers: and its erosion
1
0Ί
Limited rather than full review of prerogative powers
101
Developments in the
1960s
and
1970s 103
Conclusion-the constitutionality of reform
106
III. Full reviewability-the GCHQ case
(1983) 107
The nature not the source of power as the determinant of reviewability
107
IV. Post-GCHQ developments
109
R v
Secretary of State for the Home Department, ex
p
Northumbna
Police Authority
(1988) 109
Foreign affairs? Ill
Excluded categories: a shrinking list?
112
V. Justiciability revisited -are all statutory powers subjectto full review?
113
Conclusion
114
Suggested further reading
117
Academic and political commentary
117
Case law and legislation
117
ш
iyìsiitLfl èicsiiìs
hinå
Operaron
θϊ
5
The House of Commons
121
Crown and commons-the original intent and the subsequent rise
of party politics
121
The fusion of powers, the riseofthe party system, and cabinet
dominance of the Commons
123
I. Setting the context
126
The sources of the Commons procedural rules
126
The Speaker
127
Resources
128
II. The passage of legislation
131
Second reading
133
Standing committees
134
Report and third reading
135
Conclusion
135
Private members Bills
136
Private Bills
138
Hybrid Bills
138
Delegated legislation
139
Henry
VIII
clauses
141
Conclusion
142
III. Controlling
lhe
executive
143
.Motions on the floor of the house
143
Emergency debates and adjournment debates
143
Questions to Ministers
144
xii
DETAILED
CONTENTS
Prime Ministerial accountability on the floor of the house
146
Early day motions
147
Questions for written answer
148
Informal processes
148
The departmental select committee system
149
Conclusion
154
Suggested further reading
157
Academic and political commentary
157
6
The House of Lords
158
Bicameral legislatures: a functionalistjustification
158
I. The historical background
159
Co-equality to complementarity: a conventional change
160
Lloyd George and the people s budget
163
The Parliament Act
1911 166
The Salisbury Doctrine and the Parliament Act
1949 169
i . The House of Lords in the modern era
170
Life peerages
171
The
1968
reforms
172
The
1974-1979
parliament
173
The House of Lords and the Thatcher governments
175
III. The work of the House of Lords today
177
Deliberation
178
Revision of legislation
179
Control of delegated legislation
180
Scrutiny of the executive
181
IV. The
1999
reforms
183
The reformed House of Lords
185
The recommendations of the Wakeham Commission
186
The
2001
White Paper
188
One parliament or three? Jackson
v
Attorney-General
190
Conclusion
194
Suggested further reading
196
Academic and political commentary
196
Case law and legislation
197
7
The Electoral System
198
I. The evolution of a democratic electoral system?
198
The Great Reform Act
1832 199
The
1867-1884
reforms: towards a universal right to vote and a fair
electoral contest
204
II. The contemporary electoral process
207
Apportionment—drawing constituency boundaries
207
The contents and conductor election campaigns
210
Countingthe vote
221
The
2010
election: a hung Parliament and a coalition government
225
Alternative voting systems
225
DETAILED
CONTENTS xiii
Conclusion
231
Suggested further reading
231
Academic and political commentary
231
Case law and legislation
232
8
Parliamentary Privilege
233
Article
9
of the Bill of Rights
1689 236
I. The admission, retention, and expulsion of members
237
Ashby
v
White
237
Paty s case
238
John VVilkes
238
Charles Bradlaugh
239
Freedom from imprisonment, arrest, and molestation
242
II. The principle of informed consent?
244
III. Thejusticiability of proceedings in Parliament
245
Actions in defamation
245
What are proceedings in parliament?
246
Redefining parliament -Pepperv Han
(1993) 249
IV. Contempt ofthe house
254
The
1967
report ofthe Privileges Committee
255
V. The regulation of MPs ethical standards
256
The register of members interests
256
Cash for questions and the report ofthe
Noian
Commission
258
The report of the Nicholls Committee
261
Parliamentary privilege and the expenses scandal
261
The Bribery Act
2010 262
Conclusion
264
Suggested further reading
264
Academic and political commentary
264
Case law and legislation
265
9
Constitutional Conventions
266
The Diceyan perspective—laws and conventions distinguished
267
The functions and sources of conventions
267
I. Collective ministerial responsibility
268
Confidence
269
Unanimity
270
Confidentiality
273
¡1.
The Monarch
275
III. Collective ministerial responsibility revisited: from Cabinet to
Prime Ministerial government
... ? 278
...And back again?
281
IV, Individual ministerial responsibility
283
issues of competence
283
Errors orjudgement
285
Issues of morality
287
xiv
DETAILED
CONTENTS
V. Can conventions become laws?
2:
Patriatingthe Canadian constitution
Patriating the Canadian constitution
289
VI. From ministerial responsibility to ministerial accountability?
The Matrix-Churchill controversy
292
VII.
Turning convention into law: the Ponsonby rule and the Constitutional
Reform and Governance Act
2010 294
Conclusion-the conventional basis of parliamentary sovereignty?
296
Suggested further reading
298
Academic and political commentary
298
Case law and legislation
298
■
г:
Ib
The Geographical Separation of Powers
10
Local Government
301
I. Localism, tradition, and the modernisation of local government
302
The Municipal Corporations Act
1835 303
II. Local government s constitutional status in the
early-twentieth-century-law and convention
306
The physical boundaries of local authorities
308
III. Taxation and representation: the fiscal autonomy of local government
309
IV. The role of the judiciary
311
V. Council housing
313
VI. From ambivalence to authoritarianism
316
VII. Financial reform i:
grant penalties and ratecapping
318
Ratecapping
318
VIII.
Collective politics and individual rights: thejudicial role
320
Fares fair : Bromley London Borough Council
v
Greater London Council
320
IX. Institutional reform ; the abolition of the GLC and metropolitan counties
322
X. Privatising
locai
government
323
The Widdicombe Report
324
Housing-individuated and collective privatisation
325
XI. Financial reform
2:
the community charge
327
A step too far? The demise of the poll tax
329
Conclusion
329
XII.
The Blair government s reforms
330
The Local Government Acts
1999
and
2000 331
The governance of London
332
Conclusion
334
Suggested further reading
335
Academic and political commentary
335
Case law and legislation
335
Π
The European Economic Community
1957-1986 336
I. The Treaty of
Romei:
founding principles
337
The types of EEC law and law-making processes
338
DETAILED
CONTENTS xv
The status of EC law within the
legat
systems of the Member States
343
Questions of accessibility
1:
the direct effect of treaty articles
347
Questions of hierarchy
1 :
the precedence or supremacy of treaty articles over
domestic legislation
350
Laws, conventions, and ultimate political facts : the empty chair crisis and the
Luxembourg accords
353
Questions of accessibility and hierarchy
2:
the direct effect and precedence of
decisions, regulations, and directives
355
Member State judicial reaction to the direct effect and precedence of EEC law
358
Conclusion
363
II. United Kingdom accession
364
EEC membership and parliamentary sovereignty:
the legislators1 views—and their votes
365
The European Communities Act
1972—
the passage
366
The European Communities Act
1972—
the terms
367
Parliamentary sovereignty: a non-justiciable concept?
368
The
1975
referendum
369
ill. The Treaty of Rome
2:
precedence and direct effect revisited
370
Confirming the direct effect of directives
370
The horizontal
d
і
rect
effect of treaty articles-Wa/rave and Koch
(1974) 372
The justiciability test and the horizontal direct effect principle reaffirmed and
expanded-De/renne
v
SABFNA
(1976) 373
Immediate precedence: Simmenthai
(1977) 374
Effet utile
before the
Conseil
d etat, the Cohn-Bendit controversy
375
IV. EEC law, parliamentary sovereignty, and the UK courts: phase one
376
The end of the doctrine of implied repeal? Macarthys
v
Smith
(1979) 377
A matter of interpretation? Garland
v
British Rail
(1983) 378
V. Direct effect-the saga continues
379
The horizontal and vertical direct effect of directives. Marshall
v
Southampton and South West Hampshire Area Health Authority
(1986) 379
Making sense of Marshall. The emergence of indirect effect
380
An analytical overview: normative and decisional supra-nationalism
383
The reduction of the democratic deficit and the emergence of
human rights as general principles of EEC law
384
Conclusion
384
Suggested further reading
385
Academic and political commentary
385
Case law and legislation
385
■ 2
íha
Rut opeati Conwiunity
žvítet1
ilio
Single European Act
386
I. The Single
Ľuropean
Act -the terms
386
Reducing the democratic deficit—Treaty amendment
389
Domestic disquiet: Margaret Thatcher s Bruges speech
390
II. Normative supra-nationalism—the I:CJ continues
391
The indirect effect of directives—continued
391
Reducmgthe democratic deficit: judicial initiatives
392
III. EC law, parliamentary sovereignty and the UK courts: phase two
393
Duke
v
GEC Reliance Ltd
394
xvi
DETAILED
CONTENTS
Pickstone
v Freemans
394
Ulster
v
Forth Dry Dock and. Engineering Co Ltd
395
Pickstone and Litster— usurping the legislative function?
396
IV. The end of parliamentary sovereignty? Or its reappearance?
397
The demise of the legal doctrine? Factortame
397
The reappearance of the political doctrine? Monetary union,
collective ministerial responsibility, and the fall of Margaret Thatcher
405
V. The Francovich remedy
408
F rančov
ich 408
VI.
Maastricht
and Amsterdam
411
The terms of the Maastricht Treaty
411
The ratification and incorporation of the Maastricht Treaty
413
The Treaty of Amsterdam
414
Conclusion
415
Suggested further reading
418
Academic and political commentary
418
Case law and legislation
419
13
The Governance of Scotland and Wales
420
The Scotland Act
1978
and the Wales Act
1978 421
I. The Scotland Act
1998 422
The terms of the Act
425
The first Scottish parliament and government
431
The
2003
and
2007
elections
432
The
2011
election and the independence referendum
433
II. Devolved government in Wales after
1998 435
The Government of Wales Act
1998 436
The Government of Wales Act
2006 439
Conclusion
440
Suggested further reading
441
Academic and political commentary
441
Case law and legislation
441
Iv i
ř
ìkmv
Administrative Law
14
Substantive Grounds of Judicial Review
445
I. Illegality 446
Excess of powers
446
Unlawful delegation of powers
454
Fettering of discretion
458
Estoppel
460
II. Irrationality
464
Irrationality as a substantive concept: assessing the merits of a
governmental decision
464
Irrationality as a procedural concept: the relevant and irrelevant considerations
principles
469
DETAILED CONTENTS
xvii
III. Proportionality-a new ground of review?
471
Bringing the courts closer to the merits of a decision
471
Conclusion
475
Suggested further reading
475
Academic and political commentary
475
Case law and legislation
475
15
Procedural Grounds of Judicial Review
476
I. Audi
alterem
partem-the
righilo a
fair hearing
478
The
initia!
rise, dilution, and fall of the audi aiterem
parterr,
principle
478
The re-emergence of the principle? Ridge
v
Baldwin
483
The emergence of the procedural fairness doctrine and the appearance of the
legitimate expectation
485
Legitimate expectation-an entitlement to a procedural benefit or a
substantive benefit?
488
The content of procedural fairness—legal representation and an obligation to
give reasons for decisions
500
Conclusion
503
II. The rule against bias
503
Direct financial interests
504
Indirect financial interests
-а
mere suspicion or a real likelihood
504
Clarifying the law? The Gough formulae
506
Ideological bias in judicial decisions
506
Further clarifying the law? The Porter
v
Magúi
formula
508
Bias in non-judicial proceedings
509
Conclusion
510
Suggested further reading
510
Academic and political commentary
510
Case law and legislation
510
16
Challenging Governmental Decisions: The Process
511
The turning point? Barnard
v
National Dock Labour Board
514
The Order
53
reforms
515
The initial Order
53
case law
517
I
.
O Reilly
v
Mackman ( 1
982) 518
Exceptions to the general principle?
521
I1
.
I he Post O Reilly case law
522
The flip side of the O Reilly com
524
A nature not source of power test—the Datafin
(1987),
Aga
Khar,
(1993),
Servite
Houses
(1999),
and
Wachmann (1993)
decisions
525
The relevance of justiciability
529
III. Retreating from O Reilly? The Roy case
529
IV. Public law principle as a defence in criminal proceedings
531
Conclusion
534
Suggested further reading
535
Academic: and political commentary
535
Case law and legislation
535
xviii
DETAILED
CONTENTS
17
Locus Standi
536
і.
The old case law
537
Declaration and injunction—a restrictive test?
538
Certiorari and prohibition-an expansive test?
542
Mandamus—a broad or narrow test?
544
II. Section
31(3)
ofthe SupremeCourt Act
1981
and the
Inland Revenue Commissioners case
545
Should standing be a threshold issue?
546
Standing in the private law stream
548
III. Post-ZRC developments
549
A citizen s action test for standing under
s
31 (3)? 549
Representative standing
551
Conclusion
554
Suggested further reading
556
Academic and political commentary
556
Case law and legislation
556
ΨΐΜ-ΐ
Vh.m Human Rights
T8 Human Rights I: Traditional Perspectives
559
I. Public protest and public order
560
The classic
dilemma-ßeatty
ν
Gillbanks
(1882) 561
The Public Order Act
1936 562
The PublicOrder Act
1986 566
II. Privacy
567
Speech and communication
567
Sado-masochistic sexual behaviour
569
III. Freedom of speech
571
Official secrecy
572
The Official Secrets Act
1989 577
Blasphemy
578
Contempt of court
580
Political libels
582
Conclusion
586
Suggested further reading
586
Academic and political commentary
586
Case law and legislation
587
І9
Human Rights II: Emergent Principles
588
I. The European Convention on Human Rights-introductory
principles
588
Institutional and jurisdictionai issues
589
Thejurisprudentia! methodology ofthe Convention
590
II. The initial status ofthe ECHR in domestic law
594
Political responses—why did Parliament not incorporate 1 the ECHR?
595
responses—the
ECH R
as a source of principle at common law
596
DETAILED
CONTENTS
xix
III. The impact of the
ECH R
on domestic law
1:
privacy
599
Speech and communication
599
Sado-masochistic sexual behaviour
601
IV. The impact of the
ECH R
on domestic law
2:
freedom of expression
602
Official secrecy
602
Political libels
603
Contempt of court
605
Blasphemy
608
Conclusion
612
Suggested further reading
615
Academic and political commentary
615
Case law and legislation
615
20
Human Rights III: New Substantive Grounds of Review
616
I. Judicial incorporation of the Convention?
617
The Convention in domestic law
617
II. The (re-Jemergence and consolidation of fundamental human rights
as an indigenous principle of common law
619
Derbyshire County Council
v
Times Newspapers Ltd in the House of Lords
619
R v
Secretary of State for the Home Department, ex
p
Leech (no
2) 621
R v
Secretary of State for Social Security, ex
p
Joint Council for the Welfare of
Immigrants
622
III. The judicial supremacism controversy
623
Judgments of the ECJ and the ECtHR
623
Judgments in domestic courts on immigration policies
626
Ajudicial response
631
Lord
M
usti
I I s analysis
633
Conclusion
634
Suggested further reading
634
Academic commentary
634
Case law and legislation
635
2Ί
Human Rights IV: The Human Rights Act
1998 636
I. The terms of the Act
637
An incorporation of fundamental rights?
637
Sections
1
and
2:
Convention Rights under the
HRA
and Convention articles
under the
ECH R
639
Section
3—
new rules of statutory interpretation?
640
Section
4—
the declaration of incompatibility
643
The inter-relationship between
s
3
and
s
4 644
Sections
3
and
4
create consequential or secondaryjurisdictions
644
Convention Rights and the common law
644
Section
6—
the reach of the act: vertical (and horizontal?) effect
645
Convention Rights and the common law
...
again
... 647
A special status for churches and the press?
652
Questions of procedure
653
On the separation of powers
655
Political entrenchment? A new rights culture within government and parliament
656
xx
DETAILED
CONTENTS
Conclusion
657
Suggested further reading
660
Academic commentary
660
Case law and legislation
660
22
Human Rights V: The Impact of the Human Rights Act
1998 661
I. Convention Rights and Convention articles under
s
2,
statutory interpretation under
s
3,
and the use of declarations of
incompatibility under
s
4 661
The mitialjudiciaJ reaction
662
A more structured approach to the meaning of possible in
s
3?
A distinction
between systemic and individuated consequences
665
The notion of deference to legislative judgment
672
And deference to the ECtHR?
675
The question of precedent
677
II. ThehorizontalityoftheAct
679
III. Proportionality as a ground of review of executive action
693
The initial judicial response: the Daly and Alcon oury cases
693
A more elaborate approach: the Denbigh High School and Miss Behavin cases
694
Blurring the issue? Doherty
v
Birmingham City Council
(2008)
and Manchester
City Council
v
Pinnock
(2009) 697
Conclusion
699
IV. Judicial supremacism revisited?
700
Conclusion
703
Suggested further reading
708
Academic commentary
708
Case law and legislation
709
23
Human Rights VI: Governmental Powers of Arrest and Detention
710
Liberty under Art
5
ECHR
711
The Police and Criminal Evidence Act
1984 712
I. Deprivation of liberty for ordinary offences
713
Powers of arrest
713
Powers of detention after arrest
723
Powers of detention without arrest
725
II. Deprivation of liberty for terrorist offences
730
Powers of arrest and detention in the
1945-1977
era
731
Powers of arrest and detention in the post-1977 era
737
Conclusion
742
Suggested further reading
744
Academic commentary
744
Case law and legislation
744
24
Conclusion
745
I. Entrenchment of fundamental law re-visited
745
Issues of legality and legitimacy
745
Questions of legitimacy
750
DETAILED
CONTENTS xxi
Conclusion
753
Suggested further reading
754
Academic commentary
754
Case iaw and legislation
754
Bibliography
755
index
781
|
any_adam_object | 1 |
author | Loveland, Ian 1962- |
author_GND | (DE-588)152257098 |
author_facet | Loveland, Ian 1962- |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | Loveland, Ian 1962- |
author_variant | i l il |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV042440237 |
classification_rvk | PL 713 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)908270699 (DE-599)BSZ426108906 |
dewey-full | 342.41 |
dewey-hundreds | 300 - Social sciences |
dewey-ones | 342 - Constitutional and administrative law |
dewey-raw | 342.41 |
dewey-search | 342.41 |
dewey-sort | 3342.41 |
dewey-tens | 340 - Law |
discipline | Rechtswissenschaft |
edition | 7. ed. |
format | Book |
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institution | BVB |
isbn | 9780198709039 |
language | English |
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spelling | Loveland, Ian 1962- Verfasser (DE-588)152257098 aut Constitutional law, administrative law, and human rights a critical introduction Ian Loveland 7. ed. Oxford Oxford Univ. Press 2015 XLIV, 796 S. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Menschenrecht Verfassungsrecht Constitutional law / Great Britain Administrative law / Great Britain Human rights / Great Britain Menschenrecht (DE-588)4074725-6 gnd rswk-swf Verfassungsrecht (DE-588)4062801-2 gnd rswk-swf Verwaltungsrecht (DE-588)4063351-2 gnd rswk-swf Großbritannien Großbritannien (DE-588)4022153-2 gnd rswk-swf Großbritannien (DE-588)4022153-2 g Verfassungsrecht (DE-588)4062801-2 s Verwaltungsrecht (DE-588)4063351-2 s Menschenrecht (DE-588)4074725-6 s DE-604 Digitalisierung UB Passau - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=027875556&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Loveland, Ian 1962- Constitutional law, administrative law, and human rights a critical introduction Menschenrecht Verfassungsrecht Constitutional law / Great Britain Administrative law / Great Britain Human rights / Great Britain Menschenrecht (DE-588)4074725-6 gnd Verfassungsrecht (DE-588)4062801-2 gnd Verwaltungsrecht (DE-588)4063351-2 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4074725-6 (DE-588)4062801-2 (DE-588)4063351-2 (DE-588)4022153-2 |
title | Constitutional law, administrative law, and human rights a critical introduction |
title_auth | Constitutional law, administrative law, and human rights a critical introduction |
title_exact_search | Constitutional law, administrative law, and human rights a critical introduction |
title_full | Constitutional law, administrative law, and human rights a critical introduction Ian Loveland |
title_fullStr | Constitutional law, administrative law, and human rights a critical introduction Ian Loveland |
title_full_unstemmed | Constitutional law, administrative law, and human rights a critical introduction Ian Loveland |
title_short | Constitutional law, administrative law, and human rights |
title_sort | constitutional law administrative law and human rights a critical introduction |
title_sub | a critical introduction |
topic | Menschenrecht Verfassungsrecht Constitutional law / Great Britain Administrative law / Great Britain Human rights / Great Britain Menschenrecht (DE-588)4074725-6 gnd Verfassungsrecht (DE-588)4062801-2 gnd Verwaltungsrecht (DE-588)4063351-2 gnd |
topic_facet | Menschenrecht Verfassungsrecht Constitutional law / Great Britain Administrative law / Great Britain Human rights / Great Britain Verwaltungsrecht Großbritannien |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=027875556&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
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