Editors’ note: The blog has asked constitutional lawyers to review the main party manifestos ahead of the May […]
Category Archive: Northern Ireland
Sionaidh Douglas-Scott: British withdrawal from the EU: an existential threat to the United Kingdom?
The Conservative party’s proposal to repeal the Human Rights Act (and their proposal’s many faults) has already been […]
The Northern Ireland peace agreement was born on the 10th April 1998, Good Friday, in Belfast and will […]
The debate over the place of human rights in UK constitutional law continues to run and run. The […]
Advice on a Bill of Rights for Northern Ireland, submitted to the Secretary of State by the Northern […]
For reasons that are not difficult to grasp, the constitutional process in Northern Ireland has been marked by […]
Nick Barber’s post on a Scottish referendum raises many interesting issues, not least the implications of setting the […]
Most of us will be aware of the famous remarks of Lord Justice Laws in Thoburn v Sunderland […]
It is a little over 6 weeks since the Supreme Court delivered its long-awaited ruling in Axa General […]
‘To produce one Bill of rights may be regarded as a misfortune. To produce eight, looks like carelessness’. […]
