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Judicial Review : Principles and Procedure

ISBN: 9780199545094 | 019954509X
Format: Hardcover
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Pub. Date: 5/19/2013

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SummaryTable of ContentsAuthor Biography
Covering all of the substantive grounds on which a claim may be brought, this definitive new work provides unrivalled analysis and guidance on the law of judicial review.

Written by three experienced practitioners at a leading public law set, Judicial Review: Principles and Procedure includes chapters on the most common grounds for bringing a claim, such as procedural fairness and irrationality, but also covers emerging grounds such as delay on the part of public bodies and error of fact. In addition, the authors provide a sep... MORE

Section 1
1. The legal and theoretical bases for judicial review
2. Scope of judicial review
3. Effect of unlawful decisions
Section 2
4. The Human Rights Act 1998 and judicial review
5. European Union law and judicial review
Section 3
6. Procedural fairness: general issues
7. Procedural fairness: specific requirements
8. Consultation
9. Bias, predetermination and independence
10. Delay on the part of public bodies
11. Reasons
Section 4 ... MORE
12. Identifying powers and duties and ascertaining their scope
13. Acting outside the scope of powers and duties
14. Failing to exercise powers or to comply with duties
15. Relevant, irrelevant and permissible considerations
16. The public sector equality duty
17. Unauthorised or improper purposes
18. Irrationality and unreasonableness
19. Proportionality
20. Legitimate expectation
21. Errors of fact
Section 5
22. Policies, guidance and non-statutory schemes
23. Challenges to legislation
Section 6
24. Claims for which the judicial review procedure must or may be used
25. The parties
26. The initial stages
27. The permission stage
28. The substantive stage
29. Costs
Section 7
30. Interim remedies
31. Final remedies
32. Monetary awards
33. Discretionary refusal of final remedies

All three authors are practising barristers at 4-5 Gray's Inn Squre, with extensive experience of acting in judicial review claims in the Administrative Court and appellate courts, and in public law matters in the European Courts. All are members of the Attorney-General's Panels of Counsel and other related government panels.

Jonathan Auburn is the author of Legal Professional Privilege (Hart, 2000) and a contributor to Phipson on Evidence (Sweet and Maxwell, 2009), The White Book on Civil Procedure, Atkins Court Forms: Disclosure (LexisNexis, 2011), Halsbury's Laws of England, Local Government volume (LexisNexis, 2000), and Education and the Courts (Jordans, 2012). Jonathan is a member of the executive committee of The Constitutional and Administrative Law Bar Association.

Jonathan Moffett is the editor of Atkins Court Forms: Administrative Court (LexisNexis, 2007) and a contributor to Halsbury's Laws of England, Local Government volume (LexisNexis, 2000), The New Oxford Companion to Law (OUP, 2008), and Education and the Courts (Jordans, 2012).

Andrew Sharland is co-author of Media Law and Human Rights (OUP 2009) and contributor to Education and the Courts (Jordans, 2012), Atkins Court Forms: Human Rights (LexisNexis, 2006), and Information Rights (Sweet and Maxwell, 2007).


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