Our systems are now restored following recent technical disruption, and we’re working hard to catch up on publishing. We apologise for the inconvenience caused. Find out more

Recommended product

Popular links

Popular links


The Collaborative Constitution

The Collaborative Constitution

The Collaborative Constitution

Aileen Kavanagh, Trinity College Dublin
June 2025
Not yet published - available from May 2025
Paperback
9781108717533

    In this book, Aileen Kavanagh offers a fresh account of how we should protect rights in a democracy. Departing from leading theoretical accounts which present the courts and legislature as rivals for constitutional supremacy, Kavanagh argues that protecting rights is a collaborative enterprise between all three branches of government - the Executive, the legislature, and the courts. On a collaborative vision of constitutionalism, protecting rights is neither the solitary task of a Herculean super-judge, nor the dignified pronouncements of an enlightened legislature. Instead, it is a complex, dynamic, and collaborative endeavour, where each branch has a distinct but complementary role to play, whilst engaging with each other in a spirit of comity and mutual respect. Connecting constitutional theory with the practice of protecting rights in a democracy, this book offers an innovative understanding of the separation of powers, grounded in the values and virtues of constitutional collaboration.

    • Uses concrete examples from the UK, Canada and other jurisdictions to demonstrate how protecting rights is a collaborative enterprise between all three branches of government
    • Offers in-depth analysis of leading theoretical debates and connects these with constitutional practice
    • Engages with comparative constitutional law scholarship, showing how the UK system both instantiates and contradicts dominant comparative law perspectives

    Product details

    June 2025
    Paperback
    9781108717533
    508 pages
    229 × 152 mm
    Not yet published - available from May 2025

    Table of Contents

    • Introduction: the Call for Collaboration
    • Part I. Institutions and Interactions:
    • 1. Constitutionalism beyond manicheanism
    • 2. The promise and perils of dialogue
    • 3. The case for collaboration
    • Part II. Rights in Politics:
    • 4. Governing with rights
    • 5. Legislating for rights
    • 6. Legislated rights: from domination to collaboration
    • Part III. Judge as Partner:
    • 7. Judge as partner
    • 8. The HRA as partnership in progress
    • 9. Calibrated constitutional review
    • 10. Courting collaborative constitutionalism
    • Part IV. Legislatures in Response:
    • 11. Underuse of the override
    • 12. Declarations, obligations, collaborations
    • Conclusion: the currency of collaboration.
      Author
    • Aileen Kavanagh , Trinity College Dublin

      Aileen Kavanagh is Professor of Constitutional Governance, Trinity College Dublin, and Director of TriCON – the Trinity Centre for Constitutional Governance. Formerly a Professor of Law at the University of Oxford, Aileen Kavanagh has written widely on UK and comparative public law, and on constitutional theory. Her previous books include Arguing About Law (co-edited, 2008) and Constitutional Review under the UK Human Rights Act 1998 (2009).