Tom Bingham and the Transformation of the Law
A Liber Amicorum
Herausgeber: Andenas, Mads; Fairgrieve, Duncan
Tom Bingham and the Transformation of the Law
A Liber Amicorum
Herausgeber: Andenas, Mads; Fairgrieve, Duncan
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Tom Bingham is among the most influential judges of the twentieth century, having occupied in succession the most senior judicial offices, Master of the Rolls, Lord Chief Justice and, currently, Senior Law Lord. His judicial and academic work has deeply influenced the development of the law in a period of substantial legal change. In particular his role in establishing the new UK Supreme Court, and his views on the rule of law and judicial independence have left a profound mark on UK constitutional law. He has also been instrumental in championing the academic and judicial use of comparative…mehr
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Tom Bingham is among the most influential judges of the twentieth century, having occupied in succession the most senior judicial offices, Master of the Rolls, Lord Chief Justice and, currently, Senior Law Lord. His judicial and academic work has deeply influenced the development of the law in a period of substantial legal change. In particular his role in establishing the new UK Supreme Court, and his views on the rule of law and judicial independence have left a profound mark on UK constitutional law. He has also been instrumental in championing the academic and judicial use of comparative law, through his judicial work and involvement with the British Institute of International and Comparative Law. This volume collects around fifty essays from colleagues and those influenced by Lord Bingham, from across academia and legal practice. The essays survey Lord Bingham's pivotal role in the transformations that have taken place in the legal system during his career.
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Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Seitenzahl: 970
- Erscheinungstermin: 20. Juni 2009
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 51mm
- Gewicht: 1520g
- ISBN-13: 9780199566181
- ISBN-10: 0199566186
- Artikelnr.: 25684958
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Seitenzahl: 970
- Erscheinungstermin: 20. Juni 2009
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 51mm
- Gewicht: 1520g
- ISBN-13: 9780199566181
- ISBN-10: 0199566186
- Artikelnr.: 25684958
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Professor Andenas has been the Director of the Norwegian Centre for Human Rights (NCHR) since 2008. He holds the degrees of Cand jur (Oslo), Ph D (Cambridge) and MA and DPhil (Oxford). He has held a number of senior academic appointments in the United Kingdom, including as Director of the British Institute of International and Comparative Law, London and Director of the Centre of European Law at King's College, University of London. He remains a Fellow of the Institute of European and Comparative Law, University of Oxford and at the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies, School of Advanced Studies, University of London, and Professor of Law, University of Oslo Duncan Fairgrieve is Fellow in Comparative Law and Director of the Tort Law Centre at the British Institute of International and Comparative Law. He is also Maître de Conférences at Sciences Po, Paris. He holds degrees from Oxford, London and Paris.
* Editors' Preface
* Introductory Tribute: Lord Bingham of Cornhill
* A Biographical Sketch: The Early Years
* The Rule of Law and the Role of Law
* 1: Mary Arden: On Liberty and the European Convention on Human Rights
* 2: Guy Canivet: Variations sur la politique jurisprudentielle: les
juges ont-ils une âme
* 3: Anthony Clarke and John Sorabji: The rule of law and our changing
constitution
* 4: Richard Clayton and Hugh Tomlinson: Lord Bingham's contribution to
the HRA
* 5: Paul Craig: Substance and procedure in judicial review
* 6: Walter Van Gerven: Scandals, Political Accountability and the rule
of law. Counting Heads?
* 7: Murray Gleeson: The value of clarity
* 8: Elizabeth-Anne Gumbel: Duty of care and public authority liability
* 9: Jeffrey Jowell: What decisions should judges not take?
* 10: Robert McCorquodale: The rule of law internationally: Lord
Bingham and the British Institute of International and Comparative
Law
* 11: Dawn Oliver: The United Kingdom constitution in transition: from
where to where?
* 12: Philip Sales: The general and the particular: parliament and the
courts under the scheme of the European Convention on Human Rights
* 13: Stephen Sedley: The history of public law: why it went to sleep
like a lamb and re-awoke like a giant in the course of the 20th
century
* 14: Brian Simpson: The reflections of a craftsman
* The Independence and Organisation of Courts
* 15: Brenda Hale: A supreme judicial leader
* 16: John Bell: Sweden's contribution to governance of the judiciary
* 17: Sian Elias: Lord Bingham: a New Zealand appreciation
* 18: David Keene: The independence of the judge
* 19: Beverley McLachlin: Judicial independence: a functional
perspective
* 20: John Mummery: Lord Bowen of Colwood: 1835-94
* 21: Jean-Marc Suavé: Judging the administration in France: changes
ahead?
* European and International Law in National Courts
* 22: Guido Alpa: Jurisdiction
* 23: Jean-Paul Costa and Patrick Titiun: Le Royaume Uni, la France et
la Convention européenne des droits de l'homme
* 24: Roger Errera: The twisted road from Prince Albert to Campbell and
beyond, towards a right of privacy
* 25: Rosalyn Higgins: National courts and the International Court of
Justice
* 26: Francis Jacobs: European law and the English judge
* 27: Olivier Dutheillet de Lamothe: Contrôle de constitutionnalité,
contrôle de conventionnalité et judicial review : la mise en uvre de
la convention européenne des droits de l'homme en France et au
Royaume-Uni
* 28: Vaughan Lowe: Rules of international law and English courts
* 29: Philippe Sands and Blinne Ní Ghrálaigh: Towards an international
rule of law?
* 30: Konrad Schiemann: The movement towards transparency in decision
taking
* 31: Gillian Triggs: Lord Bingham: of swallows and international law
* 32: Colin Warbrick: Who calls the shots? Defence, foreign affairs,
international law and the governance of Britain
* Commercial law and globalisation
* 33: Richard Aikens: Reforming commercial court procedures
* 34: Andrew Burrows: Lord Bingham and three continuing remedial
controversies
* 35: Stephen Breyer: Economic reasoning and judicial review
* 36: Lawrence Collins: Aspects of justiciability in international law
* 37: Jan Dalhuisen: What could the selection by the parties of English
law in a civil law contract in commerce and finance truly mean?
* 38: Steven Gee: Lord Bingham's dictum in Ashville on one-stop dispute
resolution
* 39: Roy Goode: Earth, air and space: the Cape Town Convention and
Protocols and their contribution to international commercial law
* 40: Bernard Rix: Lord Bingham's contributions to commercial law
* Comparative law in the courts ('There is a World Out There')
* 41: Robin Cooke: The road ahead for the Common Law
* 42: Michael Kirby: The Lords, Tom Bingham and Australia
* 43: Basil Markesinis: Goethe, Bingham and the gift of an open mind
* 44: Horatia Muir Watt: On the waning magic of territoriality in the
conflict of laws
* 45: Anne-Marie Slaughter: Shielding the rule of law
* 46: Jane Stapleton: Benefits of comparative tort reasoning: lost in
translation
* 47: Bernard Stirn: Le Conseil d'Etat, so British?
* 48: Vincenzo Zeno Zencovich: The rule of law in European perspective
* 49: Mads Andenas and Duncan Fairgrieve: Lord Bingham and comparative
law
* Introductory Tribute: Lord Bingham of Cornhill
* A Biographical Sketch: The Early Years
* The Rule of Law and the Role of Law
* 1: Mary Arden: On Liberty and the European Convention on Human Rights
* 2: Guy Canivet: Variations sur la politique jurisprudentielle: les
juges ont-ils une âme
* 3: Anthony Clarke and John Sorabji: The rule of law and our changing
constitution
* 4: Richard Clayton and Hugh Tomlinson: Lord Bingham's contribution to
the HRA
* 5: Paul Craig: Substance and procedure in judicial review
* 6: Walter Van Gerven: Scandals, Political Accountability and the rule
of law. Counting Heads?
* 7: Murray Gleeson: The value of clarity
* 8: Elizabeth-Anne Gumbel: Duty of care and public authority liability
* 9: Jeffrey Jowell: What decisions should judges not take?
* 10: Robert McCorquodale: The rule of law internationally: Lord
Bingham and the British Institute of International and Comparative
Law
* 11: Dawn Oliver: The United Kingdom constitution in transition: from
where to where?
* 12: Philip Sales: The general and the particular: parliament and the
courts under the scheme of the European Convention on Human Rights
* 13: Stephen Sedley: The history of public law: why it went to sleep
like a lamb and re-awoke like a giant in the course of the 20th
century
* 14: Brian Simpson: The reflections of a craftsman
* The Independence and Organisation of Courts
* 15: Brenda Hale: A supreme judicial leader
* 16: John Bell: Sweden's contribution to governance of the judiciary
* 17: Sian Elias: Lord Bingham: a New Zealand appreciation
* 18: David Keene: The independence of the judge
* 19: Beverley McLachlin: Judicial independence: a functional
perspective
* 20: John Mummery: Lord Bowen of Colwood: 1835-94
* 21: Jean-Marc Suavé: Judging the administration in France: changes
ahead?
* European and International Law in National Courts
* 22: Guido Alpa: Jurisdiction
* 23: Jean-Paul Costa and Patrick Titiun: Le Royaume Uni, la France et
la Convention européenne des droits de l'homme
* 24: Roger Errera: The twisted road from Prince Albert to Campbell and
beyond, towards a right of privacy
* 25: Rosalyn Higgins: National courts and the International Court of
Justice
* 26: Francis Jacobs: European law and the English judge
* 27: Olivier Dutheillet de Lamothe: Contrôle de constitutionnalité,
contrôle de conventionnalité et judicial review : la mise en uvre de
la convention européenne des droits de l'homme en France et au
Royaume-Uni
* 28: Vaughan Lowe: Rules of international law and English courts
* 29: Philippe Sands and Blinne Ní Ghrálaigh: Towards an international
rule of law?
* 30: Konrad Schiemann: The movement towards transparency in decision
taking
* 31: Gillian Triggs: Lord Bingham: of swallows and international law
* 32: Colin Warbrick: Who calls the shots? Defence, foreign affairs,
international law and the governance of Britain
* Commercial law and globalisation
* 33: Richard Aikens: Reforming commercial court procedures
* 34: Andrew Burrows: Lord Bingham and three continuing remedial
controversies
* 35: Stephen Breyer: Economic reasoning and judicial review
* 36: Lawrence Collins: Aspects of justiciability in international law
* 37: Jan Dalhuisen: What could the selection by the parties of English
law in a civil law contract in commerce and finance truly mean?
* 38: Steven Gee: Lord Bingham's dictum in Ashville on one-stop dispute
resolution
* 39: Roy Goode: Earth, air and space: the Cape Town Convention and
Protocols and their contribution to international commercial law
* 40: Bernard Rix: Lord Bingham's contributions to commercial law
* Comparative law in the courts ('There is a World Out There')
* 41: Robin Cooke: The road ahead for the Common Law
* 42: Michael Kirby: The Lords, Tom Bingham and Australia
* 43: Basil Markesinis: Goethe, Bingham and the gift of an open mind
* 44: Horatia Muir Watt: On the waning magic of territoriality in the
conflict of laws
* 45: Anne-Marie Slaughter: Shielding the rule of law
* 46: Jane Stapleton: Benefits of comparative tort reasoning: lost in
translation
* 47: Bernard Stirn: Le Conseil d'Etat, so British?
* 48: Vincenzo Zeno Zencovich: The rule of law in European perspective
* 49: Mads Andenas and Duncan Fairgrieve: Lord Bingham and comparative
law
* Editors' Preface
* Introductory Tribute: Lord Bingham of Cornhill
* A Biographical Sketch: The Early Years
* The Rule of Law and the Role of Law
* 1: Mary Arden: On Liberty and the European Convention on Human Rights
* 2: Guy Canivet: Variations sur la politique jurisprudentielle: les
juges ont-ils une âme
* 3: Anthony Clarke and John Sorabji: The rule of law and our changing
constitution
* 4: Richard Clayton and Hugh Tomlinson: Lord Bingham's contribution to
the HRA
* 5: Paul Craig: Substance and procedure in judicial review
* 6: Walter Van Gerven: Scandals, Political Accountability and the rule
of law. Counting Heads?
* 7: Murray Gleeson: The value of clarity
* 8: Elizabeth-Anne Gumbel: Duty of care and public authority liability
* 9: Jeffrey Jowell: What decisions should judges not take?
* 10: Robert McCorquodale: The rule of law internationally: Lord
Bingham and the British Institute of International and Comparative
Law
* 11: Dawn Oliver: The United Kingdom constitution in transition: from
where to where?
* 12: Philip Sales: The general and the particular: parliament and the
courts under the scheme of the European Convention on Human Rights
* 13: Stephen Sedley: The history of public law: why it went to sleep
like a lamb and re-awoke like a giant in the course of the 20th
century
* 14: Brian Simpson: The reflections of a craftsman
* The Independence and Organisation of Courts
* 15: Brenda Hale: A supreme judicial leader
* 16: John Bell: Sweden's contribution to governance of the judiciary
* 17: Sian Elias: Lord Bingham: a New Zealand appreciation
* 18: David Keene: The independence of the judge
* 19: Beverley McLachlin: Judicial independence: a functional
perspective
* 20: John Mummery: Lord Bowen of Colwood: 1835-94
* 21: Jean-Marc Suavé: Judging the administration in France: changes
ahead?
* European and International Law in National Courts
* 22: Guido Alpa: Jurisdiction
* 23: Jean-Paul Costa and Patrick Titiun: Le Royaume Uni, la France et
la Convention européenne des droits de l'homme
* 24: Roger Errera: The twisted road from Prince Albert to Campbell and
beyond, towards a right of privacy
* 25: Rosalyn Higgins: National courts and the International Court of
Justice
* 26: Francis Jacobs: European law and the English judge
* 27: Olivier Dutheillet de Lamothe: Contrôle de constitutionnalité,
contrôle de conventionnalité et judicial review : la mise en uvre de
la convention européenne des droits de l'homme en France et au
Royaume-Uni
* 28: Vaughan Lowe: Rules of international law and English courts
* 29: Philippe Sands and Blinne Ní Ghrálaigh: Towards an international
rule of law?
* 30: Konrad Schiemann: The movement towards transparency in decision
taking
* 31: Gillian Triggs: Lord Bingham: of swallows and international law
* 32: Colin Warbrick: Who calls the shots? Defence, foreign affairs,
international law and the governance of Britain
* Commercial law and globalisation
* 33: Richard Aikens: Reforming commercial court procedures
* 34: Andrew Burrows: Lord Bingham and three continuing remedial
controversies
* 35: Stephen Breyer: Economic reasoning and judicial review
* 36: Lawrence Collins: Aspects of justiciability in international law
* 37: Jan Dalhuisen: What could the selection by the parties of English
law in a civil law contract in commerce and finance truly mean?
* 38: Steven Gee: Lord Bingham's dictum in Ashville on one-stop dispute
resolution
* 39: Roy Goode: Earth, air and space: the Cape Town Convention and
Protocols and their contribution to international commercial law
* 40: Bernard Rix: Lord Bingham's contributions to commercial law
* Comparative law in the courts ('There is a World Out There')
* 41: Robin Cooke: The road ahead for the Common Law
* 42: Michael Kirby: The Lords, Tom Bingham and Australia
* 43: Basil Markesinis: Goethe, Bingham and the gift of an open mind
* 44: Horatia Muir Watt: On the waning magic of territoriality in the
conflict of laws
* 45: Anne-Marie Slaughter: Shielding the rule of law
* 46: Jane Stapleton: Benefits of comparative tort reasoning: lost in
translation
* 47: Bernard Stirn: Le Conseil d'Etat, so British?
* 48: Vincenzo Zeno Zencovich: The rule of law in European perspective
* 49: Mads Andenas and Duncan Fairgrieve: Lord Bingham and comparative
law
* Introductory Tribute: Lord Bingham of Cornhill
* A Biographical Sketch: The Early Years
* The Rule of Law and the Role of Law
* 1: Mary Arden: On Liberty and the European Convention on Human Rights
* 2: Guy Canivet: Variations sur la politique jurisprudentielle: les
juges ont-ils une âme
* 3: Anthony Clarke and John Sorabji: The rule of law and our changing
constitution
* 4: Richard Clayton and Hugh Tomlinson: Lord Bingham's contribution to
the HRA
* 5: Paul Craig: Substance and procedure in judicial review
* 6: Walter Van Gerven: Scandals, Political Accountability and the rule
of law. Counting Heads?
* 7: Murray Gleeson: The value of clarity
* 8: Elizabeth-Anne Gumbel: Duty of care and public authority liability
* 9: Jeffrey Jowell: What decisions should judges not take?
* 10: Robert McCorquodale: The rule of law internationally: Lord
Bingham and the British Institute of International and Comparative
Law
* 11: Dawn Oliver: The United Kingdom constitution in transition: from
where to where?
* 12: Philip Sales: The general and the particular: parliament and the
courts under the scheme of the European Convention on Human Rights
* 13: Stephen Sedley: The history of public law: why it went to sleep
like a lamb and re-awoke like a giant in the course of the 20th
century
* 14: Brian Simpson: The reflections of a craftsman
* The Independence and Organisation of Courts
* 15: Brenda Hale: A supreme judicial leader
* 16: John Bell: Sweden's contribution to governance of the judiciary
* 17: Sian Elias: Lord Bingham: a New Zealand appreciation
* 18: David Keene: The independence of the judge
* 19: Beverley McLachlin: Judicial independence: a functional
perspective
* 20: John Mummery: Lord Bowen of Colwood: 1835-94
* 21: Jean-Marc Suavé: Judging the administration in France: changes
ahead?
* European and International Law in National Courts
* 22: Guido Alpa: Jurisdiction
* 23: Jean-Paul Costa and Patrick Titiun: Le Royaume Uni, la France et
la Convention européenne des droits de l'homme
* 24: Roger Errera: The twisted road from Prince Albert to Campbell and
beyond, towards a right of privacy
* 25: Rosalyn Higgins: National courts and the International Court of
Justice
* 26: Francis Jacobs: European law and the English judge
* 27: Olivier Dutheillet de Lamothe: Contrôle de constitutionnalité,
contrôle de conventionnalité et judicial review : la mise en uvre de
la convention européenne des droits de l'homme en France et au
Royaume-Uni
* 28: Vaughan Lowe: Rules of international law and English courts
* 29: Philippe Sands and Blinne Ní Ghrálaigh: Towards an international
rule of law?
* 30: Konrad Schiemann: The movement towards transparency in decision
taking
* 31: Gillian Triggs: Lord Bingham: of swallows and international law
* 32: Colin Warbrick: Who calls the shots? Defence, foreign affairs,
international law and the governance of Britain
* Commercial law and globalisation
* 33: Richard Aikens: Reforming commercial court procedures
* 34: Andrew Burrows: Lord Bingham and three continuing remedial
controversies
* 35: Stephen Breyer: Economic reasoning and judicial review
* 36: Lawrence Collins: Aspects of justiciability in international law
* 37: Jan Dalhuisen: What could the selection by the parties of English
law in a civil law contract in commerce and finance truly mean?
* 38: Steven Gee: Lord Bingham's dictum in Ashville on one-stop dispute
resolution
* 39: Roy Goode: Earth, air and space: the Cape Town Convention and
Protocols and their contribution to international commercial law
* 40: Bernard Rix: Lord Bingham's contributions to commercial law
* Comparative law in the courts ('There is a World Out There')
* 41: Robin Cooke: The road ahead for the Common Law
* 42: Michael Kirby: The Lords, Tom Bingham and Australia
* 43: Basil Markesinis: Goethe, Bingham and the gift of an open mind
* 44: Horatia Muir Watt: On the waning magic of territoriality in the
conflict of laws
* 45: Anne-Marie Slaughter: Shielding the rule of law
* 46: Jane Stapleton: Benefits of comparative tort reasoning: lost in
translation
* 47: Bernard Stirn: Le Conseil d'Etat, so British?
* 48: Vincenzo Zeno Zencovich: The rule of law in European perspective
* 49: Mads Andenas and Duncan Fairgrieve: Lord Bingham and comparative
law