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Category Archive: Comparative law

Robert Leckey: Fundamental Rights, Physician-Assisted Death and the Court’s Institutional Role: A Comment on Carter v. Canada (Attorney General)

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On 6 February 2015, the Supreme Court of Canada reversed its ruling on assisted suicide. In 1993, in a […]

Constitutional Law Group February 9, 2015 Canada, Comparative law

Event: SOAS Symposium: Law, Politics and Constitution-Making in the Arab Spring

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20 March 2015, 15:25-19:00 Khalili Lecture Theatre, SOAS, University of London, Russell Square, London, UK 15:25 Welcome Notes: […]

Constitutional Law Group February 9, 2015 Comparative law, Constitution-Making

Farrah Ahmed: The Untapped Potential for Constitutional Avoidance in Social Rights Adjudication

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In his 2012 book, Judging Social Rights, Jeff King makes a powerful case for a limited, incrementalist, judicial […]

Constitutional Law Group February 6, 2015 Comparative law, Human rights, India, Judicial review

Event: Contemporary Issues in Indian Public Law: Transnational Perspectives, 12 April 2015

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The Faculty of Law, University of Oxford, Melbourne Law School, University of Melbourne and National Law University, Delhi […]

Constitutional Law Group February 4, 2015 Comparative law, Events, IACL, India

IACL roundtable Bucharest: constitutional rules for a balanced budget

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Directed by Professor Elena-Simina Tănăsescu, a IACL roundtable was held in Bucharest, Romania, on on 21-22 November 2014 […]

UKCLA January 6, 2015 Comparative law, IACL

Christoph Smets: A UK senate: Competition for the Commons or federalising representation?

After the warning shot fired from the ballot boxes of the Scottish electorate in this year’s referendum on […]

Constitutional Law Group December 1, 2014 Comparative law, Constitutional reform

Greg Weeks – Comment on Australia: School Chaplains and Commonwealth Funding

Ron Williams, a father of four from Queensland, brought a case before the High Court in 2012 which […]

Constitutional Law Group June 19, 2014 Australia, Comparative law

David Erdos: Mind the Gap – The CJEU Google Spain Judgment Profoundly Challenges the Current Realities of Freedom of Expression and Information Online

CROSS-POSTED FROM OPENDEMOCRACY.NET. The European UnionData Protection Directive of 1995 has always had lofty, and in many ways […]

Constitutional Law Group May 15, 2014 Comparative law, European Union, Human rights

Grégoire Webber: On the ‘lawful’ premise and prostitution

‘It is not a crime in Canada to sell sex for money.’ This factual assertion opens the unanimous […]

Constitutional Law Group May 13, 2014 Canada, Comparative law, Human rights, Judicial review, Uncategorized

Ruthann Robson: US Supreme Court in Schuette: Michigan Can Ban Affirmative Action

CROSS-POSTED FROM Constitutional Law Professors Blog (US). The Court’s opinion in Schuette v. BAMN (Coalition to Defend Affirmative […]

Constitutional Law Group April 25, 2014 America, Comparative law, Human rights, Judicial review

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