02 November 2020

JOURNAL: Northern Ireland Legal Quarterly (Vol. 71, No. 2)

 




The Northern Ireland Legal Quarterly has recently published a special issue called “The Constitutional Legacies of Empire”. Here the table of contents:

Introduction: ‘The Constitutional Legacies of Empire’

Paul F Scott

99-107

Articles

Crown act of state and detention in Afghanistan

Jane Rooney

109-133

Foreign act of state and empire

Courtney Grafton

135-155

 ‘Something like the principles of British liberalism’: Ivor Jennings and the international and domestic, 1920–1960

Martin Clark

157-174

Unequal citizenship and subjecthood: a rose by any other name ...?

Devyani Prabhat

175-191

Constitutional law and empire in interwar Britain: universities, liberty, nationality and parliamentary supremacy

Donal K Coffey

193-209

Constitutionalism in the periphery: revisiting the roots of self-rule movements in Ireland and India

T T Arvind, Daithí Mac Síthigh

211-237

Constitutional legacies of empire in politics and administration: Jamaica’s incomplete settlement

Lindsay Stirton, Martin Lodge

239-260

The Privy Council and the constitutional legacies of empire

Paul F Scott

261-283

The constitutional influence of the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council on the UK apex court: institutional proximity and jurisprudential divergence?

Roger Masterman

285-302

Notes and commentaries

Asymmetrical international law and its role in constituting empires: the ICJ Chagos Advisory Opinion

Gail Lythgoe

305-315

Law's empire: Mutua and Kimathi

Tim Sayer

317-324

Book review: (B)ordering Britain: Law, Race and Empire by Nadine El-Enany

Paul F Scott

 

More info here


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