The Golden Metwand and the Crooked Cord

Essays in Honour of Sir William Wade QC

Christopher Forsyth editor Ivan Hare editor

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Oxford University Press

Published:19th Feb '98

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

The Golden Metwand and the Crooked Cord cover

This is a lively collection of essays by an internationally distinguished group of the world's most respected administrative lawyers. It is a timely work as public law in the United Kingdom is at an extremely interesting stage in its long development. A period of unprecedented expansion in the judicial review jurisdiction and the growing legal impact of membership of the European Community provide an incentive to reflect upon and consolidate existing learning, and assess how public law doctrine and scholarship will progress into the new millenium. There has also been a recent burgeoning of theoretical public law scholarship and the development of more critical and socio-legal approaches to the subject of law and administration. This book takes account of all these factors, and also reflects the international dimension of administrative law issues. The essays are written in honour of Sir Wlliam Wade, who was Professor of English at St John's College Oxford, Rouse Ball Professor of English Law at the University of Cambridge and Master of Gonville and Caius College Cambridge. He is one of the leading scholars of his generation and is justly credited for having contributed hugely to the development of administrative law in Britain through his text Administrative Law (OUP) but also through the Hamlyn lectures and through his work as a member of the English bar, his lectures throughout the world and numerous articles, notes and essays.

The quality of the work in this collection is impressive. * Dawn Oliver, EJIL 10 (1999) *
this collection of essays is a 'tour de force'. The editors have clearly had no difficulty assembling an impressive array of contributors .../ / one must admit that the reviewer's task in doing justice to 16 independent arguments is an impossible one. Of course each essay deserves to be read in full and not in summary./ The lasting impression one has is of a collection which manages both to be a worthy tribute to the breadth and depth of Sir William's influence, and at the same time a window on the diversity and complexity of current constitutionally-led academic and practical debate in the field of public law. That a collection of essays can so effortlessly point in these two directions is the greatest compliment of all to the honorand. One is left in no doubt that Sir William's work is of seminal importance to so much that remains of enduring concern. * Edwin Simpson, Law Quarterly Review, Jan 1999. *
Light is shed, sometimes brilliantly, on difficult and controversial issues in judicial review litigation. * Richard Rawlings, reader in law, LSE, ? newspaper *
This volume significantly contributes to the project of conceptualising principles of administrative law, and I suspect that is just the book which the editors set out to produce. * Adrian Hunt, University of Birmingham, Civil Justice Quarterly, vol 18, April 1999 *

ISBN: 9780198264699

Dimensions: 243mm x 163mm x 25mm

Weight: 710g

396 pages