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The constitutional foundations of judicial review

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    $7 us_us_auth*0004701 $a Elliott, Mark, $d 1975- $4 aut
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    $a The constitutional foundations of judicial review / $c Mark Elliott
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    $a London : $b Hart Publishing, $c 2001
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    $a Přehled judikatury
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    $a Table of contents: Part 1 Justifying judicial review: the rise of judicial review; the challenge -justifying judicial review; the notion of constitutional legitimacy; the importance of examining constitutional legitimacy; conclusion. Part 2 The traditional ultra vires principle: structural coherence and internal coherence; the artificiality of the ultra vires principle; passive artificiality; active artificiality; the emptiness of the ultra vires principle; the radical and the moderate. Part 3 Legislative frameworks and the control of discretionary power: the constitutional status of legislative intention; legislation and the scope of discretionary power; conclusion. Part 4 The modified ultra vires principle: judicial review and the rule of law; ultra vires methodology in a constitutional setting; the modified ultra vires principle - overcoming the deficiencies of the traditional model; the advantages of the modified ultra vires principle over the common law theory of review; conclusion. Part 5 Beyond the logical boundary? judicial review of non-statutory power: the sources of governmental power; judicial review of prerogative power; judicial review of de facto governmental power; conclusion. Part 6 Judicial review and human rights: human rights in the United Kingdom; the constitutional foundations of human rights review; the legal basis of human rights review; conclusion. Part 7 The constitutional foundations of judicial review: constitutional justification and normative justification; a context-sensitive approach to constitutional justification; impetus and implementation; conclusion.
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Number of the records: 1  

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