Symposium: Sir Anthony Mason: Towering over the High Court of Australia

Symposium: Sir Anthony Mason: Towering over the High Court of Australia

Gabrielle APPLEBY & Andrew LYNCH

Two figures tower over the history of the High Court of Australia: Sir Owen Dixon (1929-1964) and Sir Anthony Mason (1972-1995). While our argument is that it is Mason who has risen to be the contemporary towering jurist of Australia’s High Court, they both remain obvious contenders for the appellation of a ‘Towering Justice’ in Australia,…

See the full post on our Symposium Partner, the ICONnect Blog: here

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10 Cases that Shaped India in 2018

10 Cases that Shaped India in 2018

Satya PRASOON, Disha CHAUDHRY & Jai BRUNNER

Editors’ note: this blog post is the second post in a two-part series on ten significant decisions of the Indian Supreme Court in 2018, the first can be viewed here.

There are many academic traditions of interdisciplinary enquiry and critique that can be employed to interpret the Indian Supreme Court's record in 2018, it is however possible to identify some trends.

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Symposium: Towering Judges in Comparative Perspective: Introduction

Symposium: Towering Judges in Comparative Perspective: Introduction

Iddo PORAT and Rehan ABEYRATNE

On January 25-26, we convened a conference at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, Faculty of Law, bringing together leading constitutional scholars to discuss a new topic in comparative perspective: ‘Towering Judges’. All told, we discussed 13 judges from 12 jurisdictions and two general papers. This Blog Symposium, co-hosted by IACL-AIDC and ICONnect, will give readers a snapshot…

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Symposium: Editors' Introduction: What makes a Judge a ‘Towering Judge’?

Symposium: Editors' Introduction: What makes a Judge a ‘Towering Judge’?

Erika ARBAN & Tom Gerald DALY

This Blog Symposium is based on a recent conference on ‘Towering Judges’, organised by Rehan Abeyratne and Iddo Porat and held at the Chinese University of Hong Kong Faculty of Law on 25-26 January 2019. The conference brought together leading constitutional scholars to discuss the topic of prominent or pivotal judges in multiple states, and from a global perspective.

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10 Cases that Shaped India in 2018

10 Cases that Shaped India in 2018

Satya PRASOON, Disha CHAUDHRY and Jai BRUNNER

Editors’ note: this blog post is the first post in a two-part series on ten significant decisions of the Indian Supreme Court in 2018.

There are many academic traditions of interdisciplinary enquiry and critique that can be employed to interpret the Indian Supreme Court's record in 2018. Each has its own sets of presuppositions and points of departure, and each might interpret the judgments differently…

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Metaphors and Identity Based Narrative in Constitutional Adjudication: When Judicial Dominance Matters

Metaphors and Identity Based Narrative in Constitutional Adjudication: When Judicial Dominance Matters

Oreste POLLICINO

As Gabor Halmai has shown very well, the Hungarian constitutional case law has revealed how a not truly independent (euphemism) Constitutional Court is capable of manipulating the notion of constitutional identity in order to distort its original meaning to align it with the views of the political majority in office.

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The AACC – and Not Only its Members – as an Object of Constitutional Research

The AACC – and Not Only its Members – as an Object of Constitutional Research

Maartje DE VISSER

Editors’ note: this blog post is a reply to a piece by Fabian Duessel on ‘Getting to know AACC Members’ published on the IACL-AIDC Blog on 2 February 2019 and available here.

In his recent blogpost ‘Getting to Know AACC Members’, Fabian Duessel points to the need for scholars to improve their understanding of the composition, powers and work environment of Asian courts with a constitutional mandate.

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Postponement fuels lack of trust in Nigeria’s ability to hold fair elections

Postponement fuels lack of trust in Nigeria’s ability to hold fair elections

Fola ADELEKE

Editors’ Note: This text is a cross-post under Creative Commons licence from The Conversation AFRICA where it was published on 17 February 2019. The original text can be viewed here.

Nigeria has postponed its 2019 presidential elections. The presidential and parliamentary votes have been rescheduled for February 23rd and the gubernatorial, state assembly and federal area council elections have been rescheduled for March 9th.

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A Multi-layered Indian Judicial Crisis: Listing and hearing of cases before the Supreme Court of India

A Multi-layered Indian Judicial Crisis: Listing and hearing of cases before the Supreme Court of India

Vikram Aditya NARAYAN & Jahnavi SINDHU

Editor’s Note: This blog post continues the cooperation between the IACL-AIDC Blog with global leaders in comparative constitutional law. One of these new partnerships is with the journal VRUe / Law and Politics in Africa, Asia and Latin America. As part of this partnership, VRÜ editors select one article from each of the journal’s quarterly editions to be converted into a Blog post. This (freely available) article appeared in the latest issue of VRÜ, a special issue dedicated to the Supreme Court of India.

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Fighting the Good Fight: Litigating Foreign Relations, International Law and Corruption at the Constitutional Level in Guatemala

Fighting the Good Fight: Litigating Foreign Relations, International Law and Corruption at the Constitutional Level in Guatemala

Carlos Arturo VILLAGRÁN SANDOVAL

Editor’s Note: this text is a cross-post from OpinioJuris where it was published on 11 February 2019. The original text can be viewed here.

The CICIG is a pioneering international body, created between Guatemala and the UN, with broad reaching effects in the Guatemalan domestic legal system and with the mandate to fight corruption within the Guatemalan state.

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