The Separation of Powers and the British Constitution

  • N.W. Barber Trinity College, University of Oxford
Keywords: rule of law, United Kingdom, Parliament, judicial independence, separation of powers, British constitution

Abstract

This paper provides an account of the nature of the separation of powers and considers its application in the British constitution. It charts the developing understanding of the principle in British constitutional scholarship over the last century, and shows the ways in which the British constitution has shifted towards a modern understanding of the principle in the last twenty years.

Author Biography

N.W. Barber, Trinity College, University of Oxford

Fellow and Tutor in Law, Trinity College, University of Oxford

Published
2012-02-08
How to Cite
BarberN. (2012). The Separation of Powers and the British Constitution. Law Journal of the Higher School of Economics, (5), 39-50. https://doi.org/10.17323/2072-8166.2012.5.39.50
Section
British and Russian Constitutional Law