1,280 research outputs found
Constitutional Futures Podcast: Episode 15
In this episode, Prof Colin Harvey speaks with Oran Doyle.Oran Doyle is Professor in Law at Trinity College Dublin. He also holds a dual appointment as a research professor at the Academia Sinica in Taipei. Prof Doyle is an expert in comparative constitutional law, with a particular focus on the issues of constitutional amendment, territory and Irish unification. He is the author of 'The Irish Constitution: A Contextual Analysis' and (with Tom Hickey) 'Constitutional Law: Text, Cases and Materials'. Prof Doyle is a regular contributor to public debates on issues of constitutional law in Ireland
Constitutional Futures Podcast: Episode 15
In this episode, Prof Colin Harvey speaks with Oran Doyle.Oran Doyle is Professor in Law at Trinity College Dublin. He also holds a dual appointment as a research professor at the Academia Sinica in Taipei. Prof Doyle is an expert in comparative constitutional law, with a particular focus on the issues of constitutional amendment, territory and Irish unification. He is the author of 'The Irish Constitution: A Contextual Analysis' and (with Tom Hickey) 'Constitutional Law: Text, Cases and Materials'. Prof Doyle is a regular contributor to public debates on issues of constitutional law in Ireland
The Constitutional Tensions of Brexit
The constitutional upheavals occasioned by Brexit can, at one level, be attributed to the way in which the EU referendum was conceived and conducted: the party political rather than constitutional motivation for the referendum; the relatively short and poor quality referendum campaign; the failure to take seriously the implications of a territorially divided result; the lack of planning for how withdrawal would be implemented; and the narrowness of the majority in favour of Leave. These weaknesses may have contributed to a significant absence of ‘losers’ consent’ amongst Remain voters, as well as a lack of realism about the choices and compromises that would need to be made in order to secure a withdrawal agreement. But these essentially procedural factors, important as they were, reflected and exacerbated much deeper tensions within the UK constitutional order. In this introductory chapter, we explore these deeper tensions, identifying four key sources of constitutional unease which have been exposed by Brexit: first, the UK’s fraught relationship with the European Union; second, strained territorial relations within the UK; third, Ireland’s complex relationship with the UK and the contested position of Northern Ireland; and, fourth, developing institutional tensions at the core of the UK constitution
Oral history interview with William Doyle
William Doyle is the author of An American Insurrection
Populism: A health check for constitutional democracy?
“Populism” appears everywhere: a frequently proffered assessment—or perhaps diagnosis—of constitutional systems around the world. Both its supporters and opponents emphasise its newness. But its physiognomy, causes, and impact on legal orders and institutions are a matter of deep controversy. In a few words, its contours and core components adapt to different constitutional settings. Populist forces back a variety of agendas, which often overlap in a more rhetorically than concrete way.
The authors of this issue divide themselves among opponents to populism and moderately optimistic observers. In this respect, populism has probably become a catalyst both for its supporters and detractors. Populism identifies through ideas that rally increasing number of discontents. But also opponents identify as populists the perceived threats to liberal democracy as they understand them. Defining populism has not simply proven to be a Sysyphean task; it has also showed that it is all but easy to pin down what a liberal democracy is made of. Contemporary debates about the fate of democracy need to abandon metaphysics for a more realistic, down-to-earth approach that is sensitive of the specificities of
each constitutional setting
Yvonne Scannel et Robert Cannon, Martin Clarke, Oran Doyle, « The Habitats Directive in Ireland », 1999
Makowiak Jessica. Yvonne Scannel et Robert Cannon, Martin Clarke, Oran Doyle, « The Habitats Directive in Ireland », 1999. In: Revue Européenne de Droit de l'Environnement, n°2, 2000. p. 243
Administrative action, the rule of law and unconstitutional vagueness
Oran Doyle’s chapter argues that more needs to be done to instantiate the rule of law ideal: administrative action potentially undermines the rule of law, since individuals may have no opportunity to tailor their activities to legally binding directives before they are issued. The chapter notes that there are tentative indications in the case law that the courts may recognise a new constitutional doctrine constraining legislative grants of administrative power. Doyle critically assesses the emergence of this doctrine and seek to influence its development, disentangling it from a confusing association with the rule against the delegation of legislative power. Notwithstanding the absence of any clear textual basis, the chapter argues that recognition of this doctrine would be a legitimate exercise of judicial power.</p
Aftermath: Lost in a forest
Briohny Doyle (Victoria), author of Echolalia, reflects on the seductive myth of renewal in our personal and planetary lives.Griffith ReviewNo Full Tex
A PSYCHOANALYSIS AND BIOGRAPHICAL ANALYSIS ON THE MAIN CHARACTER AS WELL AS THE AUTHOR OF SHERLOCK HOLMES : A STUDY IN SCARLET BY SIR ARTHUR CONAN DOYLE
A PSYCHOANALYSIS AND BIOGRAPHICAL ANALYSIS ON THE MAIN CHARACTER AS WELL AS THE AUTHOR OF SHERLOCK HOLMES : A STUDY IN SCARLET BY SIR ARTHUR CONAN DOYLE
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