# The Frontiers of Public Law - Portail Universitaire du droit

> Source : [Portail Universitaire du Droit](https://univ-droit.fr)
> URL : https://univ-droit.fr/recherche/actualites-de-la-recherche/parutions/33966-the-frontiers-of-public-law
> Description : the frontiers of public law, présentation de l'éditeur this major collection contains selected papers from the third public law conference, an international ...

## Parution

- **ISBN** : 978-1-509-93037-1
- **Éditeur** : Hart

## Résumé

Présentation de l'éditeur
This major collection contains selected papers from the third Public Law Conference, an international conference hosted by the University of Melbourne in July 2018. The collection includes contributions by leading academics and senior judges from across the common law world, including Australia, Canada, New Zealand, the United Kingdom and the United States. The collection explores the frontiers of public law, examining cutting-edge issues at the intersection of public law and other fields. The collection addresses four principal frontiers: public law and international law; public law and indigenous peoples; public law and other domestic fields, specifically criminal law and private law; and public law and public administration. In common with the two books from the previous Public Law Conferences, this collection offers authoritative insights into the most important issues emerging in public law, and is essential reading for those working in the field.
 
Sommaire
1. Introduction: The Frontiers of Public Law  Jason NE Varuhas and Shona Wilson Stark  
PART 1. PUBLIC LAW AND INTERNATIONAL LAW 
2. Global Constitutionalism: Myth and Reality   Cheryl Saunders
3. Frontiers of Global Administrative Law in the 2020s   Benedict Kingsbury
4.  National Security Policy-making in the Shadow of International Law: The Case of the PPG   Laura A Dickinson
5. Public Law in the UK after Brexit   Jack Beatson and Emma Foubister 
PART 2. PUBLIC LAW AND INDIGENOUS PEOPLES 
6. Indigenous Rights, Judges and Judicial Review in New Zealand   Matthew SR Palmer
7.  Coming to Terms with Communal, Land-related Decision-making by Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander Peoples in a Public Law Context   Debbie Mortimer
8.  Representing Jurisdiction: Decolonising Administrative Law in a Multijural State   Mary Liston
9. From the Heart: The Indigenous Challenge to Australian Public Law   Kirsty Gover
10. Public Law, Legitimacy and Indigenous Aspirations   Harry Hobbs
11.  Places as Persons: Creating a New Framework for Maori-Crown Relations   Andrew Geddis and Jacinta Ruru 
PART 3. PUBLIC LAW, CRIMINAL LAW AND PRIVATE LAW 
12. Changing Boundaries: Crime, Punishment and Public Law   David Feldman
13.  Discretionary Power and Consistency: Is the Sentencing Discretion Different?   Chris Maxwell
14. Public and Private Law: A Redundant Divide   Carol Harlow
15. The 'Contracting State' and the Public/Private Divide   ACL Davies
16. Public and Private Boundaries of Administrative Law   Margaret Allars 
PART 4. PUBLIC LAW AND PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION 
17.  The Nature and Bounds of Executive Power: Keeping Pace with Change   KM Hayne
18.  Peering into the Black Box of Executive Power: Cabinet Manuals, Secrecy and the Identification of Convention   Anne Twomey
19. Fomenting Authoritarianism Th rough Rules About Rulemaking   Kathryn E Kovacs
20.  Non-fettering, Legitimate Expectations and Consistency of Policy: Separate Compartments or Single Principle?   Shona Wilson Stark
21. The In-between Space of Administrative Justice: Reconciling Norms at the Front Lines of Social Assistance Agencies   Jennifer Raso
22.  A 'Culture of Justification'? Police Interpretation and Application of the Human Rights Act 1998   Richard Martin


## Métadonnées

- **Catégorie** : Parutions
- **Publié** : 2020-01-09

---

*Portail Universitaire du Droit — [univ-droit.fr](https://univ-droit.fr)*