The state of Scots law: law and government after the devolution settlement

The state of Scots law: law and government after the devolution settlement

The state of Scots law: law and government after the devolution settlement

Law of the United Kingdom and Ireland > Scotland > Scotland > General and comprehensive works > Miscellaneous individual addresses and essays

Edition Details

  • Language: English
  • Jurisdiction(s): Scotland
  • Publication Information: Edinburgh : Butterworths, 2001
  • Type: Book
  • Permalink: https://books.lawi.org.uk/the-state-of-scots-law-law-and-government-after-the-devolution-settlement/ (Stable identifier)

Short Description

XI, 171 pages ; 24 cm

Purpose and Intended Audience

Useful for students learning an area of law, The state of Scots law: law and government after the devolution settlement is also useful for lawyers seeking to apply the law to issues arising in practice.

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Bibliographic information

  • Responsable Person: edited by Lindsay Farmer and Sott Veitch.
  • Publication Date: 2001
  • Country/State: Scotland
  • Number of Editions: 6 editions
  • First edition Date: 2001
  • Last edition Date: 2007
  • Languages: British English
  • Library of Congress Code: KDC334
  • Dewey Code: 349.411
  • ISBN: 0406944520 9780406944528
  • OCLC: 48248442

Main Contents

Constitutionalism, judicial review and “the Evident Utility of the Subjects within Scotland”. Lawyers in Contemporary Scottish Politics: a new “dundas Depotism”? Legislating for Diversity: Minorities in the New Scotland. Scots Law and European Private Law. Old and Foreign: History, Historiography and camparative law. Scottish Self-Government and Unitary Constitution. Transitional Jurisprudence in teh UK: A Very Scottish Coup? Imagined Communities, Imaginary Conversations: Failure and the Consturction of Legal Identities. Under the Shadow over Parliament House: The Strange Case of Legal Nationalism.

Summary Note

Constitutional and political changes have produced a fundamental challenge to the ideas and institutions of Scots law. This book provides relevant information and is suitable for all those who are interested in Scots law. ”’

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