The legality of the Covid-19 lockdown in New Zealand has been thrust into the spotlight, with valuable analysis […]
Category Archive: Comparative law
The New Zealand Government recently lifted its “Level 4” COVID-19 restrictions. Significant restrictions, including coercive powers restricting basic […]
Crisis has been a defining and underlying theme of Cypriot constitutional law since long before Covid-19. Constitutional genesis […]
We are in uncharted waters in comparative terms. Israel held three election cycles within 12 months to end […]
In this post, I first offer an essential account of how Italy has dealt with the Coronavirus outbreak. […]
The New Zealand Government’s “go hard, go early” response to the COVID-19 pandemic has garnered widespread praise – […]
What does it take to become a paradigmatic case of a constitutional state acting in reaction to a […]
On 25 March, the UK passed the Coronavirus Act 2020 as part of its attempt to manage the […]
As the dust settles following Miller (No. 2)/Cherry, tension inevitably mounts over the next instalment of the Brexit […]
Introduction In a succinct and surprisingly unanimous judgment in Miller and Cherry [2019] UKSC 41 the UK Supreme […]
