Tom Bingham (The late, Senior Law Lord, 2000-2008)
The Business of Judging
Selected Essays and Speeches: 1985-1999
Tom Bingham (The late, Senior Law Lord, 2000-2008)
The Business of Judging
Selected Essays and Speeches: 1985-1999
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Collecting the most important writings of Tom Bingham during his time in judicial office before the House of Lords, The Business of Judging is written for anyone with an interest in public affairs. It offers an absorbing account of the law and the courts in public life, presenting Bingham's reflections on the judicial role and the common law.
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Collecting the most important writings of Tom Bingham during his time in judicial office before the House of Lords, The Business of Judging is written for anyone with an interest in public affairs. It offers an absorbing account of the law and the courts in public life, presenting Bingham's reflections on the judicial role and the common law.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 448
- Erscheinungstermin: 7. November 2011
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 155mm x 229mm x 28mm
- Gewicht: 668g
- ISBN-13: 9780199693351
- ISBN-10: 0199693358
- Artikelnr.: 47868666
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 448
- Erscheinungstermin: 7. November 2011
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 155mm x 229mm x 28mm
- Gewicht: 668g
- ISBN-13: 9780199693351
- ISBN-10: 0199693358
- Artikelnr.: 47868666
The late Tom Bingham, who died in September 2010, was arguably the most notable English judge of the twentieth century. An outspoken supporter of the Human Rights Act 1998, he held many of the most senior roles in the judiciary, acting as Queen's Bench judge, Lord Justice of Appeal, Master of the Rolls, Lord Chief Justice of England and Wales, and Senior Law Lord, before his retirement in 2008.
* Part I: The Business of Judging
* 1: The Judge as Juror: The Judicial Determination of Factual Issues
* 2: The Judge as Lawmaker: An English Perspective
* 3: The Discretion of the Judge
* Part II: Judges in Society
* 1: Judicial Independence
* 2: Judicial Ethics
* Part III: The Wider World
* 1: `There is a World Elsewhere': The Changing Perspectives of English
Law
* 2: Law in a Pluralist Society
* 3: Speech on the Jubilee of the Supreme Court of India
* Part IV: Human Rights
* 1: The European Convention on Human Rights: Time to Incorporate
* 2: Opinion: Should there be a Law to Protect Rights of Personal
Privacy?
* 3: The Way We Live Now: Human Rights in the New Millennium
* 4: Tort and Human Rights
* Part V: Public Law
* 1: Should Public Law Remedies be Discretionary?
* 2: The Old Despotism
* 3: Mr Perlzweig, Mr Liversidge, and Lord Atkin
* Part VI: The Constitution
* 1: The Courts and the Constitution
* 2: Anglo-American Reflections
* Part VII: The English Criminal Trial
* 1: The English Criminal Trial: The Credits and the Debits
* 2: Justice and Injustice
* 3: Silence is Golden - or is it?
* 4: A Criminal Code: Must We Wait for Ever?
* Part VIII: Crime and Punishment
* 1: The Sentence of the Court
* 2: Justice for the Young
* 3: The Mandatory Life Sentence for Murder
* 4: Speech on the Second Reading of the Crime (Sentences) Bill
* Part IX: Miscellaneous
* 1: Address to the Centenary Conference of the Bar
* 2: Who Then in Law is my Neighbour?
* 3: The Future of the Common Law
* 4: Lecture at Toynbee Hall on the Centenary of its Legal Advice
Centre
* 5: Address at the Service of Thanksgiving for Rt Hon Lord Denning OM
* 1: The Judge as Juror: The Judicial Determination of Factual Issues
* 2: The Judge as Lawmaker: An English Perspective
* 3: The Discretion of the Judge
* Part II: Judges in Society
* 1: Judicial Independence
* 2: Judicial Ethics
* Part III: The Wider World
* 1: `There is a World Elsewhere': The Changing Perspectives of English
Law
* 2: Law in a Pluralist Society
* 3: Speech on the Jubilee of the Supreme Court of India
* Part IV: Human Rights
* 1: The European Convention on Human Rights: Time to Incorporate
* 2: Opinion: Should there be a Law to Protect Rights of Personal
Privacy?
* 3: The Way We Live Now: Human Rights in the New Millennium
* 4: Tort and Human Rights
* Part V: Public Law
* 1: Should Public Law Remedies be Discretionary?
* 2: The Old Despotism
* 3: Mr Perlzweig, Mr Liversidge, and Lord Atkin
* Part VI: The Constitution
* 1: The Courts and the Constitution
* 2: Anglo-American Reflections
* Part VII: The English Criminal Trial
* 1: The English Criminal Trial: The Credits and the Debits
* 2: Justice and Injustice
* 3: Silence is Golden - or is it?
* 4: A Criminal Code: Must We Wait for Ever?
* Part VIII: Crime and Punishment
* 1: The Sentence of the Court
* 2: Justice for the Young
* 3: The Mandatory Life Sentence for Murder
* 4: Speech on the Second Reading of the Crime (Sentences) Bill
* Part IX: Miscellaneous
* 1: Address to the Centenary Conference of the Bar
* 2: Who Then in Law is my Neighbour?
* 3: The Future of the Common Law
* 4: Lecture at Toynbee Hall on the Centenary of its Legal Advice
Centre
* 5: Address at the Service of Thanksgiving for Rt Hon Lord Denning OM
* Part I: The Business of Judging
* 1: The Judge as Juror: The Judicial Determination of Factual Issues
* 2: The Judge as Lawmaker: An English Perspective
* 3: The Discretion of the Judge
* Part II: Judges in Society
* 1: Judicial Independence
* 2: Judicial Ethics
* Part III: The Wider World
* 1: `There is a World Elsewhere': The Changing Perspectives of English
Law
* 2: Law in a Pluralist Society
* 3: Speech on the Jubilee of the Supreme Court of India
* Part IV: Human Rights
* 1: The European Convention on Human Rights: Time to Incorporate
* 2: Opinion: Should there be a Law to Protect Rights of Personal
Privacy?
* 3: The Way We Live Now: Human Rights in the New Millennium
* 4: Tort and Human Rights
* Part V: Public Law
* 1: Should Public Law Remedies be Discretionary?
* 2: The Old Despotism
* 3: Mr Perlzweig, Mr Liversidge, and Lord Atkin
* Part VI: The Constitution
* 1: The Courts and the Constitution
* 2: Anglo-American Reflections
* Part VII: The English Criminal Trial
* 1: The English Criminal Trial: The Credits and the Debits
* 2: Justice and Injustice
* 3: Silence is Golden - or is it?
* 4: A Criminal Code: Must We Wait for Ever?
* Part VIII: Crime and Punishment
* 1: The Sentence of the Court
* 2: Justice for the Young
* 3: The Mandatory Life Sentence for Murder
* 4: Speech on the Second Reading of the Crime (Sentences) Bill
* Part IX: Miscellaneous
* 1: Address to the Centenary Conference of the Bar
* 2: Who Then in Law is my Neighbour?
* 3: The Future of the Common Law
* 4: Lecture at Toynbee Hall on the Centenary of its Legal Advice
Centre
* 5: Address at the Service of Thanksgiving for Rt Hon Lord Denning OM
* 1: The Judge as Juror: The Judicial Determination of Factual Issues
* 2: The Judge as Lawmaker: An English Perspective
* 3: The Discretion of the Judge
* Part II: Judges in Society
* 1: Judicial Independence
* 2: Judicial Ethics
* Part III: The Wider World
* 1: `There is a World Elsewhere': The Changing Perspectives of English
Law
* 2: Law in a Pluralist Society
* 3: Speech on the Jubilee of the Supreme Court of India
* Part IV: Human Rights
* 1: The European Convention on Human Rights: Time to Incorporate
* 2: Opinion: Should there be a Law to Protect Rights of Personal
Privacy?
* 3: The Way We Live Now: Human Rights in the New Millennium
* 4: Tort and Human Rights
* Part V: Public Law
* 1: Should Public Law Remedies be Discretionary?
* 2: The Old Despotism
* 3: Mr Perlzweig, Mr Liversidge, and Lord Atkin
* Part VI: The Constitution
* 1: The Courts and the Constitution
* 2: Anglo-American Reflections
* Part VII: The English Criminal Trial
* 1: The English Criminal Trial: The Credits and the Debits
* 2: Justice and Injustice
* 3: Silence is Golden - or is it?
* 4: A Criminal Code: Must We Wait for Ever?
* Part VIII: Crime and Punishment
* 1: The Sentence of the Court
* 2: Justice for the Young
* 3: The Mandatory Life Sentence for Murder
* 4: Speech on the Second Reading of the Crime (Sentences) Bill
* Part IX: Miscellaneous
* 1: Address to the Centenary Conference of the Bar
* 2: Who Then in Law is my Neighbour?
* 3: The Future of the Common Law
* 4: Lecture at Toynbee Hall on the Centenary of its Legal Advice
Centre
* 5: Address at the Service of Thanksgiving for Rt Hon Lord Denning OM