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Category Archive: Judicial review

Alison L Young: Judicial Review of Policies – Clarification or Judicial Retreat?

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Policies are not law. Nevertheless, they play a large role in administrative law, providing clarity as to how […]

UKCLA August 5, 2021 Administrative law, Judicial review, Judiciary

Tom Hickman QC: Quashing Orders and the Judicial Review and Courts Act

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After much huffing and puffing the Government is not going to blow the house down.  Despite commissioning a wide-ranging […]

UKCLA July 26, 2021 Judicial review

Lewis Graham: Suspended and prospective quashing orders: the current picture

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The government is currently pursuing reform of judicial review remedies. Out of the many possibilities canvassed over the […]

UKCLA June 7, 2021 Administrative law, Judicial review

Paolo Sandro: Do You Really Mean It? Ouster Clauses, Judicial Review Reform, and the UK Constitutionalism Paradox

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The Conservative government’s response to the IRAL report has raised plenty of alarm bells from UK constitutional scholars. […]

UKCLA June 1, 2021 Administrative law, Constitutional Law, Judicial review, UK Parliament, United Kingdom

Alastair Richardson: The Legality of Home Office Fees

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Project for the Registration of Children as British Citizens v Secretary of State for the Home Department (PRCBC) concerned […]

UKCLA May 26, 2021 Administrative law, Judicial review, United Kingdom

Finnian Clarke: Be careful what you wish for: The government’s judicial review consultation on public law nullity

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In its “Judicial Review Reform: the Government Response to the Independent Review of Administrative Law” consultation document, the […]

UKCLA May 24, 2021 Judicial review

Ronan Cormacain: Unaccountability – The Disease within Government

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Pierre Janelle diagnosed the root cause of The Catholic Reformation as “anarchy the disease within the church”.  It […]

UKCLA May 17, 2021 Constitutional Accountability, Judicial review, Prime Minister, UK government, United Kingdom

Mikołaj Barczentewicz: Should Cart Judicial Reviews be Abolished? Empirically Based Response

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The Government adopted a recommendation of the Independent Review of Administrative Law that Cart judicial reviews should be […]

UKCLA May 5, 2021 Administrative law, England, Judicial review, Judiciary, United Kingdom

Hayley J. Hooper: The Principle of Legality and Prerogative Power after the Third Direction Case

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In March 2021, the Court of Appeal handed down a unanimous judgment in Privacy International v Foreign Secretary ‘the […]

UKCLA April 26, 2021 Administrative law, Judicial review, prerogative power, UK government, United Kingdom

Tim Sayer: Preserving Judicial Oversight: An Appeal to Self-Interest

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Boris Johnson’s government takes the view that ours is a time of judicial overreach, necessitating redress in terms […]

UKCLA April 21, 2021 Administrative law, Constitutional reform, Human Rights Act 1998, Judicial review, UK government, United Kingdom

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