Book contents
- Non-Statutory Executive Powers and Judicial Review
- Cambridge Studies in Constitutional Law
- Non-Statutory Executive Powers and Judicial Review
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Table of Cases
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Official Action beyond Statute
- 3 The ‘Third Source’ in the Courts
- 4 A Unified Category of ‘Non-Statutory Executive Powers’
- 5 The Crown as Corporation
- 6 Public Law as the Law of Public Offices
- 7 Office in Action
- 8 Approaching Judicial Review
- 9 Competence, Conduct, and Validity
- 10 Moving beyond the Ultra Vires Debate
- 11 The Common Law Theory of Ultra Vires
- 12 The Borders of the Supervisory Jurisdiction
- 13 The Normative Foundations of Judicial Review
- Index
8 - Approaching Judicial Review
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 August 2022
- Non-Statutory Executive Powers and Judicial Review
- Cambridge Studies in Constitutional Law
- Non-Statutory Executive Powers and Judicial Review
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Table of Cases
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Official Action beyond Statute
- 3 The ‘Third Source’ in the Courts
- 4 A Unified Category of ‘Non-Statutory Executive Powers’
- 5 The Crown as Corporation
- 6 Public Law as the Law of Public Offices
- 7 Office in Action
- 8 Approaching Judicial Review
- 9 Competence, Conduct, and Validity
- 10 Moving beyond the Ultra Vires Debate
- 11 The Common Law Theory of Ultra Vires
- 12 The Borders of the Supervisory Jurisdiction
- 13 The Normative Foundations of Judicial Review
- Index
Summary
This chapter explores the different ways of approaching judicial review, and makes some initial criticisms of the historical ‘ultra vires debate’ of the 1990s and 2000s. It argues for a return to the concept of jurisdiction (and jurisdictional error) as a central category of the law, and for a focus on non-statutory executive powers as a primary case for and from which to build a theory of the supervisory jurisdiction. While legislative intention is important, wherever it is relevant, it is not relevant where the official powers in question obviously derive from rules of competence outside of legislation. Further, common law rules of conduct are always central to judicial review in the context of statutory grants of power. This insight is conducive to a simpler and more powerful conception of judicial review based around a common law doctrine of ultra vires.
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- Non-Statutory Executive Powers and Judicial Review , pp. 175 - 197Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2022