"Focussing on key concepts such as union, sovereignty, democracy and devolution, this book provides a critical analysis of Brexit and its broader context in the historical development of the British Constitution. It also features comparative case studies that will appeal to a global readership"--
Frontmatter -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- Part one. The Concubine Filizten -- Part two. Th e Princess Ayşe -- Part three. The Teacher Safiye -- Conclusion -- Glossary of names -- Glossary of terms and places -- Bibliography -- Index
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Introduction : beyond the "degree zero" of law after modernity -- Autonomous law or redundant law? : the elusive nature of legal theory -- Law as system : the missing multidimensionality of law -- Reconfiguring the legal landscape : the sojourn of legal pluralism -- The injustice of law after modernity -- Law, justice and injustice -- Legal justice I : "maimed justice" and the rule of law -- Legal justice II : reclaiming the rule of law from its "dark side" : critical legal justice -- The enigma of human rights -- Critical legal justice and beyond : cosmopolitanism -- Beyond cosmopolitanism : the murky world of governance and global "justice" -- Conclusion : law and justice after modernity.
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Abstract Brexit is very much about the boundaries of law and government. Whatever else it may be, it is clearly a legal phenomenon. In this article, I explore how both the phenomenon of Brexit (its desire to reassert national boundaries from an EU seemingly bent on dissolving them), and that of the EU (a pluralist community, with membership inevitably eroding boundaries) may be very effectively captured, and important insights gained, through the medium of images. The selected images reveal the story of Brexit to be far from illustrious, but additionally undermine some of the EU's official messages. These images expose some of our assumptions about law, the EU and Brexit.
Special Issue on 'The Brexit Negotiations & The May Government' ; The article examines the impact of Brexit on the UKメs constitutional settlement, most particularly within the field of devolution. The focus of this article is on devolution, as it argues that the voices of the three devolved nations have been too much ignored in Brexit manoeuvres, especially given that Scotland and Northern Ireland voted to remain in the EU Referendum. This article questions whether, in leaving one union (the EU), Britain may in fact destroy its own union (the UK). Does the UK have the constitutional materials to safeguard against this?