The law-making process

The law-making process

By Michael Zander

Subjects: Interpretation and construction, Judicial process, Legislation, Law, Stare decisis, Law reform, Law reform, great britain, Political science, Jurisprudence, Judicial process, great britain, Nonfiction, British law - general & miscellaneous, Law, great britain, Interpretation & construction of law, Law, interpretation and construction, Legislation, great britain

Description: As a critical analysis of the law-making process, this book has no equal. For more than two decades it has filled a gap in the requirements of law students and others taking introductory courses on the legal system. It deals with every aspect of the law-making process: the preparation of legislation; its passage through Parliament; statutory interpretation; binding precedent; how precedent works; law reporting; the nature of the judicial role; European Union law; and the process of law reform. It presents a large number of original texts from a variety of sources - cases, official reports, articles, books, speeches and empirical research studies - laced with the author's informed commentary and reflections on the subject. This book is a mine of information dealing with both the broad sweep of the subject and with all its detailed ramifications.

Comments

You must log in to leave comments.

Ratings

Latest ratings