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This book assembles critical contributions on the work of TRS Allan, the Professor Emeritus of Jurisprudence and Public Law at the University of Cambridge, whose leading work in legal and constitutional theory spans almost 45 years. Allan has charted a distinctive path for legal, political, and moral theory and practice and has become a highly significant figure in the UK and in common law/parliamentary systems around the world. His ideas challenge established opinions about constitutional law within these systems as well as established views about the rule of law from more abstract or philosophical perspectives. Allan claims that law and morality find an inherent connection through the rule of law. He argues that there is a connection that flourishes in common law jurisdictions because although Parliament has sovereign legislative powers, its laws gain their full legal meaning only through an interpretive lens. This lens seeks to reconcile sovereign will with legality''s basic moral ideals, especially the idea that law must be general and capable of guiding behaviour and thus respectful of the equality and dignity of its subjects. Allan''s scholarship is powerful yet controversial, and it has inspired 20 leading scholars from the UK, Canada, Australia and New Zealand to engage with the central themes of his work. By doing so, the contributors help to make that work accessible to a new generation of scholars and students. They also provide a timely framework for engaging in the most important challenges facing our democracies today: how our legal systems do, or do not, honour and respect democracy and therefore legislative sovereignty while at the same time honouring and respecting the rule of law, or the "Promise of Legality".>
Préface
A collection of critical contributions from 20 established and rising academics, inspired by the work of TRS Allan.
Auteur
Geneviève Cartier is Professor of Public and Administrative Law at the University of Sherbrooke, Canada. Mark D Walters is Dean and Professor of Law at Queen's University, Canada.
Contenu
Introduction, Geneviève Cartier (Université de Sherbrooke, Canada) and Mark D Walters (Queen's University, Ontario) Part I: Allan, Dworkin, Dicey 1. TRS Allan and Common Law Tradition, Peter Cane (Australian National University) 2. More Protestant than Luther or Dworkin? TRS Allan on Law and Morals, David Dyzenhaus (University of Toronto, Canada) 3. Dicey on Parliamentary Sovereignty and the Common Law, Jeffrey Goldsworthy (Monash University, Australia) 4. A Catholic View of Protestant Argument in Law, Stuart Lakin (University of Reading, UK) 5. Unwritten Constitutional Principles and the Argument from Extreme Cases, Han-Ru Zhou (Université de Sherbrooke, Canada) Part II: Law, Morality, and Justice 6. The Rule of Law and Respect for Persons, Thomas Adams (University of Oxford, UK) 7. Outsiders and Trevor Allan's Rule of Law, Evan Fox-Decent (McGill University, Canada) 8. The Rule of Law Without Law, Hillary Nye (University of Alberta, Canada) 9. Against the Juridicalisation of Political Philosophy: Equality, Morality, and the Rule of Law, Christine Sypnowich (Queen's University, Canada) 10. The Essence of Rights and the Limits of Proportionality, Jacob Weinrib (Queen's University, Canada) Part III: Common Law Constitutionalism and Parliamentary Sovereignty 11. Foundations, Theory and Doctrine, Paul Craig (University of Oxford, UK) 12. Common Law and the Common Good, Michael Foran (University of Glasgow, UK) 13. Persons, not Citizens, Joanna Langille (University of Western Ontario, Canada) 14. What's Good about Parliamentary Sovereignty? George Letsas (University College London, UK) 15. Constitutional Balance and the Common Law Constitution, Alison Young (University of Cambridge, UK) Part IV: Administrative Law and the Administrative State 16. Reasons to Give Reasons, Hasan Dindjer (University of Oxford, UK) 17. Administrative Law and the Internal Perspective, Matthew Lewans (University of Alberta, Canada) 18. The Public Service, Democracy and the Rule of Law, Janet McLean (University of Auckland, Australia) 19. A Defence of Administrative Law Doctrine, Paul Daly (University of Ottawa, Canada) 20. Is TRS Allan Really that Popular? Sovereignty, Democracy and the Rule of Law, Richard Stacey (University of Toronto, Canada) A Response, Trevor Allan (University of Cambridge, UK)