Abstract
This article assesses the doctrine of parliamentary sovereignty against the background that, at the time of UK’s withdrawal from the EU, UK parliament proclaimed it to be preserved despite the continuing domestic legal effect accorded, under 2018 and 2020 Acts, to pertinent EU law provisions in the UK legal system. The relevant evidence is analysed to show whether that position is one to which English law subscribes.
Published Online: 2021-11-09
Published in Print: 2021-12-20
© 2021 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston
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Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Articles
- Societal Constitutionalism: Background, Theory, Debates
- Hegel’s Antigone: The Birth of the Constitution from the Spirit of Tragedy
- Notes and Essays
- Parliamentary Sovereignty before and beyond Brexit
- Pandemic Parliamentary Oversight of Delegated Legislation: Comparing the Performance of Westminster Systems
- Acknowledgement
- Acknowledgement
Keywords for this article
parliamentary sovereignty;
common law;
interpretation;
judicial review
Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Articles
- Societal Constitutionalism: Background, Theory, Debates
- Hegel’s Antigone: The Birth of the Constitution from the Spirit of Tragedy
- Notes and Essays
- Parliamentary Sovereignty before and beyond Brexit
- Pandemic Parliamentary Oversight of Delegated Legislation: Comparing the Performance of Westminster Systems
- Acknowledgement
- Acknowledgement