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A two-volume set bringing together for the first time the main body of work from one of the most influential figures in the field of constitutional theory, A.V. Dicey. The set includes the first edition of Dicey's canonical work The Law of the Constitution and his largely unpublished lectures on comparative constitutional law.
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A two-volume set bringing together for the first time the main body of work from one of the most influential figures in the field of constitutional theory, A.V. Dicey. The set includes the first edition of Dicey's canonical work The Law of the Constitution and his largely unpublished lectures on comparative constitutional law.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Revised edition
- Erscheinungstermin: 17. Dezember 2013
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 251mm x 178mm x 61mm
- Gewicht: 2041g
- ISBN-13: 9780199685820
- ISBN-10: 0199685827
- Artikelnr.: 38525491
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Revised edition
- Erscheinungstermin: 17. Dezember 2013
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 251mm x 178mm x 61mm
- Gewicht: 2041g
- ISBN-13: 9780199685820
- ISBN-10: 0199685827
- Artikelnr.: 38525491
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
Albert Venn Dicey (1835-1922) was Vinerian Professor of English Law at the University of Oxford and the pre-eminent constitutional lawyer of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. His Introduction to the Study of the Law of the Constitution ran to eight editions in his lifetime and remains one of the canonical texts in the history of English constitutional law. John Allison is Senior Lecturer in the Faculty of Law, University of Cambridge, and a Fellow of Queens' College, Cambridge. He previously taught at the Universities of Chicago, London, and Cape Town and is the author of two books, A Continental Distinction in the Common Law: A Historical and Comparative Perspective on English Public Law (OUP 1996) and The English Historical Constitution: Continuity, Change and European Effects (CUP 2007).
* VOLUME I: The Law of the Constitution
* Editor's Introduction
* Part I: Lectures Introductory to the Study of the Law of the
Constitution (First Edition)
* 1: The True Nature of Constitutional Law
* 2: The Sovereignty of Parliament
* 3: Comparison between Parliament and Non-Sovereign Law-Making Bodies
* 4: Parliamentary Sovereignty and Federalism
* 5: The Rule of Law: Its Nature
* 6: The Rule of Law: Its Applications
* 7: The Rule of Law: Its Applications (2)
* 8: The Connection between the Law of the Constitution and the
Conventions of the Constitution
* Part II: Addenda in Later Editions of the Law of the Constitution
Appendices
* Dicey's Inaugural Lecture
* Dicey's Revisionist Article
* VOLUME II: The Comparative Study of Constitutions
* Editor's Introduction
* Part I: The Comparative Study of the Constitution
* Introduction
* 1: General Characteristics of Existing English Constitutionalism (May
1897)
* 2: Constitutionalism of the Commonwealth (June 1897)
* 3: English Constitutionalism under George III (undated)
* 4: American Constitutionalism (May 1897)
* 5: French Constitutionalism (May 1897) (with Appendix, Droit
Administratif and Constitution of Year VIII, Art. 75)
* 6: Prussian Constitutionalism (May 1897)
* 7: Party Government (July 1898)
* 8: Parliamentarism (August 1898)
* 9: General Conclusions (May 1897)
* Part II: The Comparative Study of Constitutions
* Introduction
* 1: Historical and Non-Historical Constitutions
* 2: Ancient Constitutionalism and Modern Constitutionalism
* 3: Representative Government
* 4: The Separation of Powers
* 5: Divisions of Constitutions
* 6: The Judiciary in Relation to the Executive and Legislative Powers
* 7: Local Government and Centralization
* 8: Federal Government
* 9: ederal Government (continued): The Australian Commonwealth
* Appendices
* I: Memorandum on English Party System of Government
* II: Lecture 4: Comparison of English Executive with other Executives
or Parliamentary and Non-Parliamentary Executives
* III: Note 2: Self Government and Note 3: Self Government and Local
Self Government
* IV: Modes of Changing or Amending a Constitution
* V: Authorities and Questions for The Comparative Study of
Constitutions
* VI: Note 17: Conclusions as to Droit Administratif
* VII: Why Universal Suffrage Suits France
* VIII: Scheme of Lectures, 1906
* IX: Scheme of Lectures, 1908
* Editor's Introduction
* Part I: Lectures Introductory to the Study of the Law of the
Constitution (First Edition)
* 1: The True Nature of Constitutional Law
* 2: The Sovereignty of Parliament
* 3: Comparison between Parliament and Non-Sovereign Law-Making Bodies
* 4: Parliamentary Sovereignty and Federalism
* 5: The Rule of Law: Its Nature
* 6: The Rule of Law: Its Applications
* 7: The Rule of Law: Its Applications (2)
* 8: The Connection between the Law of the Constitution and the
Conventions of the Constitution
* Part II: Addenda in Later Editions of the Law of the Constitution
Appendices
* Dicey's Inaugural Lecture
* Dicey's Revisionist Article
* VOLUME II: The Comparative Study of Constitutions
* Editor's Introduction
* Part I: The Comparative Study of the Constitution
* Introduction
* 1: General Characteristics of Existing English Constitutionalism (May
1897)
* 2: Constitutionalism of the Commonwealth (June 1897)
* 3: English Constitutionalism under George III (undated)
* 4: American Constitutionalism (May 1897)
* 5: French Constitutionalism (May 1897) (with Appendix, Droit
Administratif and Constitution of Year VIII, Art. 75)
* 6: Prussian Constitutionalism (May 1897)
* 7: Party Government (July 1898)
* 8: Parliamentarism (August 1898)
* 9: General Conclusions (May 1897)
* Part II: The Comparative Study of Constitutions
* Introduction
* 1: Historical and Non-Historical Constitutions
* 2: Ancient Constitutionalism and Modern Constitutionalism
* 3: Representative Government
* 4: The Separation of Powers
* 5: Divisions of Constitutions
* 6: The Judiciary in Relation to the Executive and Legislative Powers
* 7: Local Government and Centralization
* 8: Federal Government
* 9: ederal Government (continued): The Australian Commonwealth
* Appendices
* I: Memorandum on English Party System of Government
* II: Lecture 4: Comparison of English Executive with other Executives
or Parliamentary and Non-Parliamentary Executives
* III: Note 2: Self Government and Note 3: Self Government and Local
Self Government
* IV: Modes of Changing or Amending a Constitution
* V: Authorities and Questions for The Comparative Study of
Constitutions
* VI: Note 17: Conclusions as to Droit Administratif
* VII: Why Universal Suffrage Suits France
* VIII: Scheme of Lectures, 1906
* IX: Scheme of Lectures, 1908
* VOLUME I: The Law of the Constitution
* Editor's Introduction
* Part I: Lectures Introductory to the Study of the Law of the
Constitution (First Edition)
* 1: The True Nature of Constitutional Law
* 2: The Sovereignty of Parliament
* 3: Comparison between Parliament and Non-Sovereign Law-Making Bodies
* 4: Parliamentary Sovereignty and Federalism
* 5: The Rule of Law: Its Nature
* 6: The Rule of Law: Its Applications
* 7: The Rule of Law: Its Applications (2)
* 8: The Connection between the Law of the Constitution and the
Conventions of the Constitution
* Part II: Addenda in Later Editions of the Law of the Constitution
Appendices
* Dicey's Inaugural Lecture
* Dicey's Revisionist Article
* VOLUME II: The Comparative Study of Constitutions
* Editor's Introduction
* Part I: The Comparative Study of the Constitution
* Introduction
* 1: General Characteristics of Existing English Constitutionalism (May
1897)
* 2: Constitutionalism of the Commonwealth (June 1897)
* 3: English Constitutionalism under George III (undated)
* 4: American Constitutionalism (May 1897)
* 5: French Constitutionalism (May 1897) (with Appendix, Droit
Administratif and Constitution of Year VIII, Art. 75)
* 6: Prussian Constitutionalism (May 1897)
* 7: Party Government (July 1898)
* 8: Parliamentarism (August 1898)
* 9: General Conclusions (May 1897)
* Part II: The Comparative Study of Constitutions
* Introduction
* 1: Historical and Non-Historical Constitutions
* 2: Ancient Constitutionalism and Modern Constitutionalism
* 3: Representative Government
* 4: The Separation of Powers
* 5: Divisions of Constitutions
* 6: The Judiciary in Relation to the Executive and Legislative Powers
* 7: Local Government and Centralization
* 8: Federal Government
* 9: ederal Government (continued): The Australian Commonwealth
* Appendices
* I: Memorandum on English Party System of Government
* II: Lecture 4: Comparison of English Executive with other Executives
or Parliamentary and Non-Parliamentary Executives
* III: Note 2: Self Government and Note 3: Self Government and Local
Self Government
* IV: Modes of Changing or Amending a Constitution
* V: Authorities and Questions for The Comparative Study of
Constitutions
* VI: Note 17: Conclusions as to Droit Administratif
* VII: Why Universal Suffrage Suits France
* VIII: Scheme of Lectures, 1906
* IX: Scheme of Lectures, 1908
* Editor's Introduction
* Part I: Lectures Introductory to the Study of the Law of the
Constitution (First Edition)
* 1: The True Nature of Constitutional Law
* 2: The Sovereignty of Parliament
* 3: Comparison between Parliament and Non-Sovereign Law-Making Bodies
* 4: Parliamentary Sovereignty and Federalism
* 5: The Rule of Law: Its Nature
* 6: The Rule of Law: Its Applications
* 7: The Rule of Law: Its Applications (2)
* 8: The Connection between the Law of the Constitution and the
Conventions of the Constitution
* Part II: Addenda in Later Editions of the Law of the Constitution
Appendices
* Dicey's Inaugural Lecture
* Dicey's Revisionist Article
* VOLUME II: The Comparative Study of Constitutions
* Editor's Introduction
* Part I: The Comparative Study of the Constitution
* Introduction
* 1: General Characteristics of Existing English Constitutionalism (May
1897)
* 2: Constitutionalism of the Commonwealth (June 1897)
* 3: English Constitutionalism under George III (undated)
* 4: American Constitutionalism (May 1897)
* 5: French Constitutionalism (May 1897) (with Appendix, Droit
Administratif and Constitution of Year VIII, Art. 75)
* 6: Prussian Constitutionalism (May 1897)
* 7: Party Government (July 1898)
* 8: Parliamentarism (August 1898)
* 9: General Conclusions (May 1897)
* Part II: The Comparative Study of Constitutions
* Introduction
* 1: Historical and Non-Historical Constitutions
* 2: Ancient Constitutionalism and Modern Constitutionalism
* 3: Representative Government
* 4: The Separation of Powers
* 5: Divisions of Constitutions
* 6: The Judiciary in Relation to the Executive and Legislative Powers
* 7: Local Government and Centralization
* 8: Federal Government
* 9: ederal Government (continued): The Australian Commonwealth
* Appendices
* I: Memorandum on English Party System of Government
* II: Lecture 4: Comparison of English Executive with other Executives
or Parliamentary and Non-Parliamentary Executives
* III: Note 2: Self Government and Note 3: Self Government and Local
Self Government
* IV: Modes of Changing or Amending a Constitution
* V: Authorities and Questions for The Comparative Study of
Constitutions
* VI: Note 17: Conclusions as to Droit Administratif
* VII: Why Universal Suffrage Suits France
* VIII: Scheme of Lectures, 1906
* IX: Scheme of Lectures, 1908