TY - BOOK AU - Elliott,Mark AU - Williams,Jack AU - Young,Alison L. TI - The UK constitution after Miller: Brexit and beyond SN - 9781509916405 U1 - 342.41 PY - 2018/// CY - Oxford PB - Hart Publishing KW - European Union KW - Great Britain KW - Constitutional law KW - Cases KW - Treaty-making power KW - Prerogative, Royal N1 - The Miller tale: an introduction; Mark Elliott, Jack Williams, and Alison L. Young --; Prerogative powers after Miller: an analysis in four e's; Jack Williams --; Miller and the prerogative; Anne Twomey --; Miller, treaty making and the rights of subjects; Eirik Bjorge --; Miller, EU law and the UK; Paul Craig --; Of power cables and bridges: individual rights and retrospectivity in Miller and beyond /; David Howarth --; Constitutional change and territorial consent : the Miller case and the Sewel convention; Aileen McHarg --; Sovereignty, consent and constitutions: the Northern Ireland references; Gordon Anthony --; The Miller case and constitutional statutes /; Sir John Laws --; Sovereignty, primacy and the common law constitution : what has EU membership taught us?; Mark Elliott --; Miller, constitutional realism and the politics of Brexit /; Richard Ekins and Graham Gee --; Miller and the future of constitutional adjudication; Alison L. Young. N2 - "The judgment of the UK Supreme Court in R (Miller) v Secretary of State for Exiting the European Union is of fundamental legal, constitutional and political significance. The Supreme Court's judgment discussed the relative powers of Parliament and the Government, the relationship between Westminster and the devolved legislatures, and the extent to which the UK's membership of the EU had changed the UK constitution, both prior to and even after departure. It also provided further evidence of the emerging role of the UK's Supreme Court as a constitutional court, despite the lack of a codified constitution in the UK. This edited collection critically evaluates the decision in Miller, providing a detailed analysis of the reasoning in the judgment and its longer-term consequences for the UK constitution through the period of Brexit and beyond. The case is used as a lens through which to evaluate the modern UK constitution and its potential future evolution. Whatever form Brexit may eventually take, the impact that EU membership and the triggering of Brexit has already had on the UK's constitutional settlement is profound. The book will be of great value to anyone interested in the effect of the Miller case and Brexit on the UK's constitution." -- ER -