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Government response to: Constitution Committee 12th report (HL 107, ISBN 9780108473142); Political and Constitutional Reform Committee 6th report (HC 734, ISBN 9780215557148); and Public Administration Select Committee 8th report (HC 900, ISBN 9780215559005). An interim government response to the PASC report published as the Committee's 1st special report of session 2010-12 (HC 1127, ISBN 9780215560056)
Government reply to the Committee's 6th report of session 2006-07 (HLP 151, ISBN 9780104011256)
Dated July 2015. Government response to HL 111, session 2014-15 (ISBN 9780108557620). Print and web pdfs available at https://www.gov.uk/government/publications Web ISBN=9781474121224
Government response to the 15th report of session 2010-12 from the Select Committee on the Constitution (HL paper 177, ISBN 9780108473661)
Government response to the Committee's 15th report, HL 116-I, session 2008-09 (ISBN 9780108444562)
There were more colons used in legislation in 2015 than there were words enacted in 1900. Using analysis from machine readings of all legislation enacted between 1900 and 2015, this book discusses the social impact of increasingly elastic legislative language on the contemporary workings of the British constitution. The hot-button debates of our time — from immigration to European integration, to the creeping power of judges — have, at their core, battles over what policy instructions are authoritative. The book encourages readers to connect the dots of British statecraft, and to understand how, exactly, public demands are transferred into laws that are then implemented with greater and lesser degrees of success. Crucially, it shows that vague legislation has a tremendous impact on policy delivery, disproportionately affecting the weakest, in areas including immigration, homelessness and anti-discrimination.
This book analyses the development and current position of the Lord Chancellor in his various roles.
This book examines the UK’s response to terrorist communication. Its principle question asks, has individual privacy and collective security been successfully managed and balanced? The author begins by assessing several technologically-based problems facing British law enforcement agencies, including use of the Internet; the existence of ‘darknet’; untraceable Internet telephone calls and messages; smart encrypted device direct messaging applications; and commercially available encryption software. These problems are then related to the traceability and typecasting of potential terrorists, showing that law enforcement agencies are searching for needles in the ever-expanding haystacks. To this end, the book examines the bulk powers of digital surveillance introduced by the Investigatory Powers Act 2016. The book then moves on to assess whether these new powers and the new legislative safeguards introduced are compatible with international human rights standards. The author creates a ‘digital rights criterion’ from which to challenge the bulk surveillance powers against human rights norms. Lord Carlile of Berriew CBE QC in recommending this book notes this particular legal advancement, commenting that rightly so the author concludes the UK has fairly balanced individual privacy with collective security. The book further analyses the potential impact on intelligence exchange between the EU and the UK, following Brexit. Using the US as a case study, the book shows that UK laws must remain within the ambit of EU law and the Court of Justice of the European Union's (CJEU's) jurisprudence, to maintain the effectiveness of the exchange. It addresses the topics with regard to terrorism and counterterrorism methods and will be of interest to researchers, academics, professionals, and students researching counterterrorism and digital electronic communications, international human rights, data protection, and international intelligence exchange.