The unity of public law
In: Bloomsbury collections
Baker : the unity of public law? /David Dyzenhaus --Deference from Baker to Suresh and beyond - interpreting the conflicting signals /David Mullan --The Baker effect : a new interface between the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms and administrative law - the case of discretion /Geneviève Cartier --The rule of policy : Baker and the impact of judicial review on administrative discretion /Lorne Sossin --'Alert, alive and sensitive' : Baker, the duty to give reasons, and the ethos of justification in Canadian public law /Mary Liston --The internal morality of administration : the form and structure of reasonableness /Evan Fox-Decent --The state of law's borders and the law of states' borders /Audrey Macklin --Refugees, asylum seekers, the rule of law and human rights /Colin Harvey --Judicial review of expulsion decisions : reflections on the UK experience /Nicholas Blake QC --Rights in the balance : non-citizens and state sovereignty under the Charter /Ninette Kelley --Common law reason and the limits of judicial deference /Trevor Allan --Of cocoons and small 'c' constitutionalism : the principle of legality and an Australian perspective on Baker /Margaret Allars --Judicial review, intensity and deference in EU law /Paul Craig --A hesitant embrace : Baker and the application of international law by Canadian courts /Jutta Brunnée & Stephen J. Toope --Authority, influence and persuasion : Baker, Charter values and the puzzle of method /Mayo Moran --The common law constitution and legal cosmopolitanism/Mark D. Walters --The tub of public law /Michael Taggart