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Loveland: Constitutional Law, Administrative Law and Human Rights 8e: Online Casebook
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Chapter one: Defining the constitution
Chapter two: Parliamentary sovereignty
Chapter three: The rule of law and the separation of powers
Chapter four: The royal prerogative
Chapter five: The House of Commons
Chester v Bateson [1920] 1 KB 829
The Statute of Proclamations 1534
The Statutory Instruments Act 1946
Chapter six: The House of Lords
Chapter seven: The electoral system
Chapter eight: Parliamentary privilege
Chapter nine: Constitutional conventions
Chapter ten: Local government
Chapter eleven: Parliamentary sovereignty within the European Union
Chapter twelve: The governance of Scotland and Wales
Chapter thirteen: Substantive grounds of judicial review 1: illegality, irrationality and proportionality
Chapter fourteen: Procedural grounds of judicial review
Chapter fifteen: Challenging governmental decisions: the process
Chapter sixteen: Locus standi
Chapter seventeen: Human rights I: Traditional perspectives
Chapter eighteen: Human rights II: Emergent principles
Chapter nineteen: Human rights III: New substantive grounds of review
Chapter twenty: Human rights IV: The Human Rights Act 1998
Chapter twenty-one: Human rights V: The impact of The Human Rights Act 1998
Chapter twenty-two: Human rights VI: Governmental powers of arrest and detention
Chapter twenty-three: Leaving the European Union
Chapter five: The House of Commons
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