Hidden law-making in the province of medical jurisprudence
Hidden law-making in the province of medical jurisprudence
Judges articulate their role in controversial cases of medical ethics in terms of deference to Parliament, lest their personal morality be improperly brought to bear. This hides a wide range of law-making activities, as parliamentary sovereignty is diffused by ‘intermediate law-makers’, and judicial activity is more subtle than the deference account implies. The nature of litigation raises questions about the contributions of other legal personnel and also the nature of the parties' interests in test-cases. While judges demonstrate an awareness of some of these issues and anxiety about the constitutional legitimacy of their work, a more nuanced account is needed of their proper role. This may be built on Austin's theory of tacit legislation. It may draw from human rights law. However, considerable work is required before the complexities of hidden law-making can be properly incorporated into the province of medical jurisprudence.
343-378
Montgomery, Jonathan
c4189a2c-86b8-466a-a7c8-985757206c04
Jones, Caroline
e39a554e-f70d-4f90-b0dc-efa252e7d41e
Biggs, Hazel
d0d08de6-6cae-4679-964c-eac653d7722b
1 May 2014
Montgomery, Jonathan
c4189a2c-86b8-466a-a7c8-985757206c04
Jones, Caroline
e39a554e-f70d-4f90-b0dc-efa252e7d41e
Biggs, Hazel
d0d08de6-6cae-4679-964c-eac653d7722b
Montgomery, Jonathan, Jones, Caroline and Biggs, Hazel
(2014)
Hidden law-making in the province of medical jurisprudence.
Modern Law Review, 77 (3), .
(doi:10.1111/1468-2230.12070).
Abstract
Judges articulate their role in controversial cases of medical ethics in terms of deference to Parliament, lest their personal morality be improperly brought to bear. This hides a wide range of law-making activities, as parliamentary sovereignty is diffused by ‘intermediate law-makers’, and judicial activity is more subtle than the deference account implies. The nature of litigation raises questions about the contributions of other legal personnel and also the nature of the parties' interests in test-cases. While judges demonstrate an awareness of some of these issues and anxiety about the constitutional legitimacy of their work, a more nuanced account is needed of their proper role. This may be built on Austin's theory of tacit legislation. It may draw from human rights law. However, considerable work is required before the complexities of hidden law-making can be properly incorporated into the province of medical jurisprudence.
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e-pub ahead of print date: 1 May 2014
Published date: 1 May 2014
Organisations:
Southampton Law School
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Local EPrints ID: 368263
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/368263
ISSN: 0026-7961
PURE UUID: aa347bb5-ce40-45c7-8db5-11601d277cf1
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Date deposited: 28 Aug 2014 14:42
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:33
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Author:
Jonathan Montgomery
Author:
Caroline Jones
Author:
Hazel Biggs
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