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Showing posts with label brexit. Show all posts
Showing posts with label brexit. Show all posts

19 December 2025

BOOK REVIEW: Donal K. COFFEY on Brexit, union, and disunion: the evolution of British constitutional unsettlement by Sionaidh Douglas-Scott (Comparative Legal History, XIII (2025), nr. 2 (December), pp. 362-366)

(Image source: Taylor&Francis)

Brexit blew up the United Kingdom’s constitutional settlement. When the UK voted to leave the European Union, it threw into sharp relief a series of delicate constitutional arrangements that governed the relationship of the Government to Parliament through prorogation, the integration of direct democracy into a system ostensibly founded on representative democracy, the balance of power between Westminster and the devolved regions, the rights that citizens held in the UK – and that is merely to scratch the surface. In the current volume, Sionaidh Douglas-Scott takes the crisis offered by Brexit to provide an overview of the British constitutional settlement across a number of different axes. The monograph as a whole is an entertaining scholarly tour de force which demonstrates the application of a wide range of methodologies in a sophisticated fashion.

To read the full review, please click here. Online access is free for members of the European Society for Comparative Legal History.

DOI: 10.1080/2049677X.2025.2580105


20 September 2019

BLOG: Prof. John HUDSON (St Andrews) on "The historical differences between Scottish and English Law, and what it means for Brexit" (BBC History Extra)

(image source: BBC History Extra)

Presentation:
This week has seen challenges to the prorogation of UK parliament in both Scottish and English courts. Ahead of an appeal in the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom, Professor John Hudson of the University of St Andrews explains why elements of Scots and English law remain distinct to this day…
Read more with History Extra.