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Judicial review of legislation : constitutionalism personified in the United Kingdom, the Netherlands and South Africa

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(1)Judicial review of legislation : constitutionalism personified in the United Kingdom, the Netherlands and South Africa Schyff, G. van der. Citation Schyff, G. van der. (2010, May 20). Judicial review of legislation : constitutionalism personified in the United Kingdom, the Netherlands and South Africa. Ius gentium: comparative perspectives on law and justice. Dordrecht-New York, Springer. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/1887/15517 Version:. Not Applicable (or Unknown). License:. Licence agreement concerning inclusion of doctoral thesis in the Institutional Repository of the University of Leiden. Downloaded from:. https://hdl.handle.net/1887/15517. Note: To cite this publication please use the final published version (if applicable)..

(2) JUDICIAL REVIEW OF LEGISLATION Constitutionalism Personified in the United Kingdom, the Netherlands and South Africa. Gerhard van der Schyff.

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(28) Promotiecommissie: Promotor: prof. dr. P.B. Cliteur Overige leden: prof. dr. A. Ellian prof. dr. WJ.M. Voermans prof. dr. T. Zwart (Universiteit Utrecht). This thesis has been reproduced with the kind permission of Springer SBM. Springer SBM will publish the thesis under the title Judicial Review of Legislation: A Study of the United Kingdom, the Netherlands and South Africa..

(29) Judicial Review of Legislation: A Comparative Study of the United Kingdom, the Netherlands and South Africa CHAPTER 1 Setting the scene (§§ 1-17) 1 Emerging bipolar constitutionalism 2 Selecting comparative material 3 Delineating the function of judicial review 3.1 National courts applying higher law 3.2 Reviewing legislation 3.3 Public law relationships 4 Outline of study CHAPTER 2 Three systems of judicial review (§§ 18-75) 1 Pursuing constitutionalism 2 United Kingdom 2.1 An unwritten constitution and the Mother of All Parliaments 2.2 Bringing rights home 3 The Netherlands 3.1 Consensus democracy and an internationalised constitution 3.2 Revitalising the Constitution by calling on the judiciary? 4 South Africa 4.1 Parliamentary sovereignty and restricted democracy 4.2 Constitutional supremacy and full democracy 5 Identifying trends CHAPTER 3 Judicial review and democracy (§§ 76-121) 1 Counter-majoritarianism 2 Democratic participation 3 Democratic legitimacy of laws 4 Legitimacy of judicial decisions 5 Trias politica re-configurated 6 Fora of principle 7 Benefit to democracy 8 Charting the middle ground CHAPTER 4 Fora of review (§§ 122-169) 1 Introduction 2 United Kingdom: Following tradition 3 The Netherlands: Pragmatism first 4 South Africa: A new beginning 5 Concluding remarks CHAPTER 5 Modalities of review (§§ 170-219) 1 Introduction 2 United Kingdom: Respecting parliamentary sovereignty 2.1 Abstract review of bills 2.2 Abstract or concrete review of legislation 3 The Netherlands: Emphasising the review of posited norms.

(30) 4. 5. 3.1 Abstract review of bills 3.2 Abstract or concrete review of legislation South Africa: Protecting political minorities 4.1 Abstract review of bills 4.2 Abstract or concrete review of legislation Concluding remarks. CHAPTER 6 Content of review (§§ 220-294) 1 Introduction 2 United Kingdom: Discovering proportionality 2.1 Legality 2.2 Legitimacy 3 The Netherlands: Which way forward? 3.1 Legality 3.2 Legitimacy 4 South Africa: Wide-ranging scrutiny 4.1 Legality 4.2 Legitimacy 5 Concluding remarks CHAPTER 7 Consequences of review (§§ 295-335) 1 Introduction 2 United Kingdom: Preferring weak review 3 The Netherlands: Non-application of legislation 4 South Africa: Exploring strong review 5 Concluding remarks CHAPTER 8 Constitutionalism personified (§§ 336-347) BIBLIOGRAPHY SUMMARY SAMENVATTING CURRICULUM VITAE.

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