Commercial regulation and judicial review

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Commercial regulation and judicial review

edited by Julia Black, Peter Muchlinski and Paul Walker

Hart, 1998

Available at  / 13 libraries

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Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The development of judicial review has been one of law's great growth industries for more than a quarter of a century. It is the public bodies whose activities are routinely subjected to judicial scrutiny which have felt the effects of judicial review most keenly. There has also been a trend in recent years towards judicial review of private bodies whose activities include a public aspect. This has meant a growing awareness,in industry and commerce, of the potential for review of regulatory decisions. In light of the growing importance of this branch of public law, the LSE and Brick Court Chambers decided jointly to host a series of seminars out of which this book has developed. In this important new book expert academics and practitioners (some of them lawyers working in regulated industries) analyse the origins and modern growth of judicial review in the commercial context and attempt to analyse the way in which the law may develop in the future.

Table of Contents

  • The juridification of relations in the UK utilities sector, Colin Scott
  • commercial regulation and judicial review - the fault lines, Martyn Hopper
  • court procedures and remedies in the context of commercial regulation, Michael Swainston
  • the need for wholesale reform on vires issues in public and private law, Christopher Clarke and Catharine Otton-Goulder
  • reviewing regulatory rules - responding to hybridisation, Julia Black
  • irrationality and commercial regulators, Paul Walker.

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