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Outputs (17)

Reflections on standing for judicial review in procurement cases (2015)
Journal Article
Bailey, S. H. (2015). Reflections on standing for judicial review in procurement cases. Public Procurement Law Review, 24(4),

The purpose of this article is to consider the case law on the requirement of standing to bring judicial review proceedings to challenge decisions made in the context of public procurement. There are suggestions in this case law that the approach to... Read More about Reflections on standing for judicial review in procurement cases.

The response to whistleblowing by regulators: a practical perspective (2015)
Journal Article
Savage, A., & Hyde, R. (2015). The response to whistleblowing by regulators: a practical perspective. Legal Studies, 35(3), 408-429. https://doi.org/10.1111/lest.12066

The Public Interest Disclosure Act 1998 provides protection for whistleblowers; it does not place statutory obligations on regulators to act in response to whistleblowing concerns. Using Freedom of Information requests as a research methodology, this... Read More about The response to whistleblowing by regulators: a practical perspective.

Rethinking the approach to economic justifications under the EU's free movement rules (2015)
Journal Article
Arrowsmith, S. (2015). Rethinking the approach to economic justifications under the EU's free movement rules. Current Legal Problems, 68(1), 307–365. https://doi.org/10.1093/clp/cuv011

The ECJ has frequently stated that it is a general rule that “economic” aims are precluded as justifications for restrictions on free movement. This on its face suggests that free movement always and automatically trumps national economic interests.... Read More about Rethinking the approach to economic justifications under the EU's free movement rules.

Witness Preparation in the ICC: An Opportunity for Principled Pragmatism (2015)
Journal Article
Jackson, J. D., & Brunger, Y. M. (2015). Witness Preparation in the ICC: An Opportunity for Principled Pragmatism. Journal of International Criminal Justice, 13(3), 601-624. https://doi.org/10.1093/jicj/mqv024

In January 2013, Trial Chamber V of the International Criminal Court (ICC) in the cases of William Ruto and Joshua Sang and of Francis Muthaura and Uhuru Kenyatta, collectively known as the ‘Kenya decisions’, made a marked departure from the firm pro... Read More about Witness Preparation in the ICC: An Opportunity for Principled Pragmatism.

The priority of procedure and the neglect of evidence and proof: facing facts in international criminal law (2015)
Journal Article
Roberts, P. (in press). The priority of procedure and the neglect of evidence and proof: facing facts in international criminal law. Journal of International Criminal Justice, 13(3), https://doi.org/10.1093/jicj/mqv021

This article concerns the role and value of procedural and evidentiary scholarship in the rapidly developing field of International Criminal Law (ICL). It extrapolates and adapts to the international context two, distinct but related, lines of argume... Read More about The priority of procedure and the neglect of evidence and proof: facing facts in international criminal law.

The paradox of dissent: judicial dissent and the projects of international criminal justice (2015)
Journal Article
Mistry, H. (in press). The paradox of dissent: judicial dissent and the projects of international criminal justice. Journal of International Criminal Justice, 13(3), https://doi.org/10.1093/jicj/mqv019

Additional opinions — dissenting opinions, separate opinions, declarations, and permutations thereof — are a familiar, if sometimes controversial, aspect of the international jurisprudential landscape. Given that the controversy provoked by additiona... Read More about The paradox of dissent: judicial dissent and the projects of international criminal justice.