Skip to content

UK Constitutional Law Association

Main navigation
  • Home
  • About UKCLA
    • About UKCLA
    • People
    • Membership
  • The Blog
    • The Blog
    • How to use it
  • IACL
  • Events
  • PL Current Survey
  • Contact

Brexit

Ewan McGaughey: Is There a ‘Legal Measure’ to Judge Parliament’s Prorogration?

U U Read More

A central theme of the High Court judgment in Miller v Prime Minister  is that there is ‘no […]

Constitutional Law Group September 14, 2019 European Union, Judicial review, Scotland, UK government, UK Parliament

Alison Young: Prorogation, Politics and the Principle of Legality

U U Read More

Constitutional lawyers often point to key cases as milestones in public law. Recently, the Supreme Court decision in […]

Constitutional Law Group September 13, 2019 Judicial review, Scotland, UK government, UK Parliament

Timothy Endicott: Don’t Panic

U U Read More

The brilliant accident of our form of constitutionalism is not just that the executive came to be accountable […]

Constitutional Law Group September 13, 2019 European Union, Judicial review, Scotland, UK government, UK Parliament

Alan Greene: Miller 2, Non-justiciability and the Danger of Legal Black Holes

U U Read More

In R (Miller) and Others v The Prime Minister (hereinafter Miller No.2), the High Court of England and […]

Constitutional Law Group September 13, 2019 European Union, Judicial review, Scotland, UK government, UK Parliament

Oliver Garner: The Benn-Burt Extension Act: A roadblock to a No-deal Brexit?

U U Read More

Introduction: extension and the Rule of Law On 9 September, the EU (Withdrawal) (No.2) Act 2019 (‘Benn-Burt Extension […]

Constitutional Law Group September 13, 2019 European Union, UK government, UK Parliament

Tom Hickman: Contempt of Parliament, Political Satire and the Case of the Rt Hon Rees-Mogg MP

U U Read More

In dramatic scenes in the House of Commons on 3 September 2019, the House wrestled control of its […]

Constitutional Law Group September 12, 2019 European Union, UK Parliament

Robert Craig: What Could Happen Next If the Government Resigns Rather than Send the Letter to the EU?

U U Read More

This post follows on from a previous piece where I attempted to set out the general rules, and […]

Constitutional Law Group September 11, 2019 European Union, UK government, UK Parliament

Paul Craig: Prorogation: Three Assumptions

U U Read More

Litigation is often predicated on certain assumptions. These may be the result of argumentation of the parties, the […]

Constitutional Law Group September 10, 2019 UK government, UK Parliament

Tarunabh Khaitan: On Coups, Constitutional Shamelessness, and Lingchi

U U Read More

The decision of the Boris Johnson government to prorogue Parliament with the motive of frustrating the latter’s attempts […]

Constitutional Law Group September 6, 2019 UK government, UK Parliament

Alexandra Sinclair and Joe Tomlinson: Eliminating Effective Scrutiny: Prorogation, No Deal Brexit, and Statutory Instruments

U U Read More

The decision to prorogue Parliament does not only have implications for whether Parliament can prevent a no deal […]

Constitutional Law Group September 4, 2019 UK government, UK Parliament

Posts navigation

Previous 1 … 6 7 8 9 10 … 34 Next
Blog at WordPress.com.
  • Home
  • About UKCLA
  • Blog
  • Blog: How to use it
  • Contact
  • Events
  • IACL
  • Membership
  • People
  • PhD Register
  • PL Current Survey
Secondary navigation
  • Twitter
  • Search

Begin typing your search above and press return to search. Press Esc to cancel.

UK Constitutional Law Association
Blog at WordPress.com.
  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • UK Constitutional Law Association
    • Join 10,347 other subscribers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • UK Constitutional Law Association
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...