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German Constitutional Law in the UK Supreme Court [PDF]
The outgoing tide of EU law will be Britain’s most significant constitutional change in recent times. In an era of uncertainties, the UK Supreme Court proved to be a guardian of the constitutional role of Parliament. The case of Miller, decided in the UK
Künnecke, Martina
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The Supreme Court and the Constitution
American Political Science Review, 1924Ever since the famous case of Marbury v. Madison in 1803, the United States Supreme Court has exercised the power of declaring acts of Congress unconstitutional and of refusing to enforce them as law. From the beginning, the exercise of this power has been the subject of great controversies as to both theory and practice.
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Constitutional Courts, Relation to Supreme Courts
SSRN Electronic Journal, 2017The article contains a comparative analysis of the main problems related to the relation between constitutional courts and supreme courts in a number of selected jurisdictions.
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The Supreme Court and the Constitution
1994The Supreme Court has an ambiguous relationship with the wider American political system. On the one hand, its power to interpret the constitution places it above the routine political fray. On the other hand, the Supreme Court’s decisionmaking, and indeed the whole of the legal system, is suffused with political controversy.
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Constitutional Innovation in the Supreme Court
Judicial Review, 20201. On 28 August 2019, the Queen in Council made an Order proroguing Parliament from, at the earliest, 9 September until 14 October.
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The Constitution, the Supreme Court, and Religion
American Political Science Review, 1967The Supreme Court of the United States, whose decisions not only define constitutional law but vitally affect national policy, has long held both an honored and a controversial place in American life. In no area do its decisions bring it more honor or more controversy than in the field of religion; for, as a member of the First Congress under the ...
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Constitutional Legitimacy and the Supreme Court
1992De Tocqueville’s observation more than 150 years ago that ‘scarcely any political question arises in the United States that is not resolved, sooner or later, into a judicial question’ is an exaggeration, but an understandable one. Because Americans litigate with enthusiasm, most divisive issues do receive an airing in the courts. And, precisely because
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Liberalism, the Constitution, and the Supreme Court
2002Abstract This chapter began as a paper we were invited to present at the Rehnquist Court symposium at the University of Tulsa. Bernard Schwartz, of course, was the symposium’s organizer. He was open to a number of areas of inquiry and we looked forward to a long conversation with him.
Robert H Henry, Arthur G Lefrancois
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6 The Supreme Court and the Constitution
2019This chapter focuses first on the power of the President of Ireland to refer draft Bills to the Supreme Court for review under Article 26 of the Constitution. It analyses the most recent instances of this practice and queries whether the ‘one judgment’ rule and the ‘immutability’ rule (whereby a decision that a Bill is constitutional can never again be
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The Supreme Court and the Constitution
Columbia Law Review, 1913Frank J. Goodnow +4 more
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