As a critical, in-depth analysis of the law-making process, this book
has no equal.
It deals with all the stages and forms of law-making:
- the preparation of legislation;
- its passage through Parliament;
- statutory interpretation;
- the operation of the rules of precedent in judicial decision-making;
- the many facets of judicial law-making;
- the machinery of law reform.
The new eighth edition covers the operation of EU law in the UK after
Brexit. It also covers pre-Brexit events such as the unprecedented
legislation by backbench MPs to stop a No Deal Exit from the EU and the
two great Supreme Court decisions over the triggering of Brexit and the
prorogation of Parliament.
The books draws on a wide range of sources including important new
empirical research such as Lord Sumption's 2019 Reith lectures (Trials
of the State - Law and the Decline of Politics) and the work of Sir
Geoffrey Palmer, former Prime Minister and Justice Minister of New
Zealand on The Law Reform Enterprise.
There are new sections on the attempt to control the size of the House
of Lords, on whether Parliament should have a role in the selection of
senior judges and on the topical question whether decisions of the
courts on constitutional questions are 'legal' or 'political'.