Administrative / Constitutional Law Law

Parliamentary Sovereignty: A Sceptical Restatement

By Adam Tucker
Coming Soon Hart Publishing Available April 2027

Specifications

ISBN-13
9781509968954
Publisher
Hart Publishing
Publication
April 2027
Format
Hardback
Jurisdiction
U.K. ? Countri(es) for reference only

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Details

This book articulates and defends a sceptical general account of parliamentary sovereignty.

It challenges the orthodox approach to this fundamental doctrine by making three key heretical claims. First, there are some laws that Parliament cannot make. Second, there are several ways in which primary legislation can be overridden or set aside by institutions other than Parliament. And third, Parliament has the power to bind itself as to the substance of future legislation. All three positions are developed using arguments which depend on existing legal materials and are compatible with the normative underpinnings of the doctrine of parliamentary sovereignty.

The book combines theoretical and doctrinal analysis. The theoretical part of the book situates Parliament's authority to legislate in the broader context of an examination of constitutional and political authority. It develops a conception of the ways in which competing views on the scope of Parliament's legislative authority are mediated into law. The doctrinal part of the book reconsiders Parliament's legal position. It proposes a novel conception of Parliament's power to bind itself, rooted in the idea of commitments. It defends the existence of a judicial power to impose narrowly conceived freestanding limits on Parliament's law-making authority, rooted in the rule of law. Finally, the book examines the challenges posed to parliamentary sovereignty by both its internal procedures and the devolved legislatures.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction

Part One: Authority, Legislation, Courts
2. A Hybrid Theory of Political Authority 3. A Composite Theory of Constitutional Authority 4. Judicial Evaluations and Legislative Authority

Part Two: Parliamentary Sovereignty Restated
5. Parliament's Power to Bind Itself 6. Freestanding Review of Primary Legislation 7. The Executive and Parliamentary Sovereignty 8. Institutional and Procedural Challenges to Parliamentary Sovereignty 9. Human Rights and Parliamentary Sovereignty

10. Conclusion
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