Repairing British Politics: A Blueprint for Constitutional Change
Autor Richard Gordon, KCen Limba Engleză Paperback – 16 feb 2010
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781849460491
ISBN-10: 1849460493
Pagini: 198
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 10 mm
Greutate: 0.32 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Hart Publishing
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1849460493
Pagini: 198
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 10 mm
Greutate: 0.32 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Hart Publishing
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Notă biografică
Richard Gordon KC, a member of Brick Court Chambers, London, is recognised as one of the UK's leading silks in administrative and public law and human rights. He is a Visiting Professor at University College London and at the Chinese University of Hong Kong. He has acted in many of the most important public law and human rights cases in recent years, and appears regularly before the House of Lords and Court of Appeal and in foreign jurisdictions as well as before the ECJ and European Court of Human Rights.
Cuprins
Acknowledgements Glossary of Essential Terms 1. SETTING THE SCENEStarting from Scratch Why We Need a Written Constitution Outline of the Book Power to the People The Origins of Parliamentary Sovereignty Cromwell and the UK's Two Written Constitutions No-one Ever Voted for Parliamentary Sovereignty Why Parliamentary Sovereignty Doesn't Work The Need for a Public Debate The Virtues of Representative Democracy Drafting a Written Constitution: The Practicalities Repairing British Politics: The Proposals Towards the Future 2. A DRAFT CONSTITUTION FOR THE UNITED KINGDOMPreamble Part 1: The State and the Constitution Part 2: Lawmaking Part 3: The House of Representatives Part 4: The Senate Part 5: Executive Government Part 6: Emergency Powers Part 7: Political Parties Part 8: The Judiciary Part 9: Fundamental Rights, Freedoms and Responsibilities Part 10: The Citizens' BranchPart 11: Other Aspects of Government Part 12: Constitutional Conventions Part 13: Constitutional Changes and Referendums Part 14: Interpretation and Final Matters 3. THE CONSTITUTION OF BRITAIN (REFERENDUMS) ACTPart 1: Referendum on a Written Constitution Part 2: Second Referendum on the Content of a Written Constitution Part 3: Implementation of the Second Referendum Part 4: Supplementary Schedules
Recenzii
Although the issue of a written constitution for the UK is not currently high on the political agenda, Gordon makes some interesting suggestions for constitutional change, some of which have been proposed by the coalition. Some, such as the fixed term for the House of Commons, have already been enacted. His observations and explanatory remarks contain some valuable insights. Practitioners and students of law and politics will find much of interest in this book.
...Richard Gordon's thoughtful contribution to the debate is both timely and worthy of very careful study. Repairing British Politics is a cautiously ambitious book: Gordon has gone to the considerable effort of drafting a constitution for the United Kingdom, and has even included a helpful glossary of terms at the beginning to help readers who are not lawyers or professional followers of politics...the real point of buying the book is the draft Constitution itself. It should be said at the outset that Gordon has produced an outstanding piece of constitutional scholarship in that he has codified a considerable amount of constitutional law and produced a coherent and comprehensive structure to both existing and new constitutional principles...It should also be noted that the Observations and Explanatory Notes Gordon provides after each part of the Constitution are immensely helpful in clarifying the thinking behind some of the choices made and the drafting used, and represent a real work of learning in themselves...Repairing British Politics does not contain all the answers and will not be the final word. It is not meant to be. But it will be impossible for anyone to seriously engage with the debate about moving to a written constitution without having digested and considered Richard Gordon's work. That is an achievement of which to be very proud.
Richard Gordon's Book ... is a coherent and well constructed argument in favour of a written constitution. It is a succinct yet masterful combination of politics, philosophy, constitutional theory, law and history, accessible to lawyers and non-lawyers alike. It is a must read for anyone interested in the future of the UK constitution...Richard Gordon has initiated a timely and much needed debate in legal and political circles over the future of the UK constitution. He makes a reasoned and persuasive case on the need for change.
...the book is a must-read for anyone who wants to get a modern grip of our constitutional angst. Gordon's punchy 35-page scene-setting narrative and critique of our system of parliamentary supremacy (motif: nobody ever voted for it), should be mandatory reading for those who want to think about this issue properly.
The questions arising as to the proposals made mean that the value of the book is demonstrated: these are issues that all nations other than the UK, New Zealand and Israel have confronted and which are of such fundamental importance that they should be discussed. Gordon does so in an engaging and interesting manner, which provides a good starting point for the debate... Thoroughly recommended.
It is well written and contains sufficient detail to enable the reader to understand the reasons for the many suggestions which Mr Gordon makes...[An} excellent book... I would recommend it to any reader who, like myself, is interested in this topic and wishes to see our country with better constitutional arrangements than the present executive dominated parliament which claims to have absolute sovereignty.
In this work Gordon combines his expertise as a QC - specialising in administrative and public law and human rights - with an historical approach, to produce an argument about the need for change in the UK constitution, and a set of proposals about what it should become...it is informative and enjoyable to read, and fulfils its purpose well, in that it makes an effective case for a written constitution and could form a useful basis for discussions of what such an entity should comprise. I recommend it to anyone interested in the way we are governed, including those who (unlike myself) do not agree with its central arguments.
[an] interesting and thought-provoking book...Creative and imaginative thinking
This book will enable even those unfamiliar with the complexities of the current system to discuss, and formulate views about, the issues.
[An] excellent example of the craft of the legal scholar and the political scientist [which] deserves close reading.
...Richard Gordon's thoughtful contribution to the debate is both timely and worthy of very careful study. Repairing British Politics is a cautiously ambitious book: Gordon has gone to the considerable effort of drafting a constitution for the United Kingdom, and has even included a helpful glossary of terms at the beginning to help readers who are not lawyers or professional followers of politics...the real point of buying the book is the draft Constitution itself. It should be said at the outset that Gordon has produced an outstanding piece of constitutional scholarship in that he has codified a considerable amount of constitutional law and produced a coherent and comprehensive structure to both existing and new constitutional principles...It should also be noted that the Observations and Explanatory Notes Gordon provides after each part of the Constitution are immensely helpful in clarifying the thinking behind some of the choices made and the drafting used, and represent a real work of learning in themselves...Repairing British Politics does not contain all the answers and will not be the final word. It is not meant to be. But it will be impossible for anyone to seriously engage with the debate about moving to a written constitution without having digested and considered Richard Gordon's work. That is an achievement of which to be very proud.
Richard Gordon's Book ... is a coherent and well constructed argument in favour of a written constitution. It is a succinct yet masterful combination of politics, philosophy, constitutional theory, law and history, accessible to lawyers and non-lawyers alike. It is a must read for anyone interested in the future of the UK constitution...Richard Gordon has initiated a timely and much needed debate in legal and political circles over the future of the UK constitution. He makes a reasoned and persuasive case on the need for change.
...the book is a must-read for anyone who wants to get a modern grip of our constitutional angst. Gordon's punchy 35-page scene-setting narrative and critique of our system of parliamentary supremacy (motif: nobody ever voted for it), should be mandatory reading for those who want to think about this issue properly.
The questions arising as to the proposals made mean that the value of the book is demonstrated: these are issues that all nations other than the UK, New Zealand and Israel have confronted and which are of such fundamental importance that they should be discussed. Gordon does so in an engaging and interesting manner, which provides a good starting point for the debate... Thoroughly recommended.
It is well written and contains sufficient detail to enable the reader to understand the reasons for the many suggestions which Mr Gordon makes...[An} excellent book... I would recommend it to any reader who, like myself, is interested in this topic and wishes to see our country with better constitutional arrangements than the present executive dominated parliament which claims to have absolute sovereignty.
In this work Gordon combines his expertise as a QC - specialising in administrative and public law and human rights - with an historical approach, to produce an argument about the need for change in the UK constitution, and a set of proposals about what it should become...it is informative and enjoyable to read, and fulfils its purpose well, in that it makes an effective case for a written constitution and could form a useful basis for discussions of what such an entity should comprise. I recommend it to anyone interested in the way we are governed, including those who (unlike myself) do not agree with its central arguments.
[an] interesting and thought-provoking book...Creative and imaginative thinking
This book will enable even those unfamiliar with the complexities of the current system to discuss, and formulate views about, the issues.
[An] excellent example of the craft of the legal scholar and the political scientist [which] deserves close reading.
Descriere
This book presents a major new constitutional analysis of the way we are governed.