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Introduction to the Study of the Law of the Constitution

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As Americans we know much about our own constitution. Dicey now gives the reader a chance to learn more about the British constitution. Albert Dicey was a British jurist and constitutional theorist. DIcey was a graduate of Balliol College, Oxford and later became Vinerian Professor of English Law at Oxford and a leading constitutional scholar of his day. An Introduction to the Study of the Law of the Constitution was written in 1885. The principles it expounds are considered part of the uncodified British constitution. Dicey believed that freedom was under attack by modern incursions against the Rule of Law. Dicey writes that the freedom British subjects enjoy depends on the supremacy of Common Law, the sovereignty of Parliament, and the courts remaining impartial without governmental interference.

820 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1885

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Albert Venn Dicey

85 books8 followers
Albert Venn Dicey was a jurist and constitutional theorist.

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Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
50 reviews12 followers
March 26, 2016
Although it was written in the late 19th century, there is still no better book to go to to learn about the distinctive features of the English legal system. Dicey was responsible for formulating for the first time the concept of "rule of law" and the idea of "parliamentary sovereignty" which understanding of the legal supremacy of parliament still holds today.
Profile Image for Frank Stein.
1,111 reviews172 followers
September 13, 2020
This is probably the first comparative study of constitutional law out there, from back in 1885, and it remains a classic. Through a focus on the English experience, Dicey explains why Parliamentary Sovereignty and the "rule of law," a term he coined, defined the English (he often used the word even for the British or UK) constitutional experience. He showed the Parliament was indeed the true legal "sovereign" of the nation, showing through things like the Septennial Act of 1716 (which extended the length of Parliament) and the Act of Union of 1800, where Parliament basically absolved itself and created a new version that included Ireland, that it could do anything. He also showed that the "Rule of Law" defined English practice because most of the "constitution" was the result of judicial cases decided between individuals, and English practice and law abjured abstract rights for more concrete "remedies." It was the practicality of English legalism that constituted its genius, Dicey shows, and he has much to demonstrate the success of this program over the more "rigid" and "abstract" French constitutionalism (although he is sympathetic to American and Swiss forms of federal constitutions.)

Much of the comparative stuff at the heart of this book is disputable and has often been disputed (especially concerning the perils of French "droit administratif"), and Dicey often wants to contrast the modern English with an 18th century French constitutionalism as opposed to the modern, post-1870 Third Republic one, but many of his general outlines have some credence. Dicey is a crystalline clear writer, so this reads easy, but his fondness for logical exactitude does occasionally lead to tedium and some tough slogs. On the whole, this will remain the starting point for studying the English constitution, and the many constitutions that emerged from it or still contrast with it.
Profile Image for Reza Khabook.
19 reviews
July 9, 2018
من ترجمه فارسي اين كتاب به كوشش دكتر سيد ناصر سلطاني، نشر نگاه معاصر رو خوندم
كتاب فارسي چون مقدمه كوتاهى داره ٢٢٠ صفحه ست
حكومت به خوبى نظام حقوقي بريتانيا رو تشريح مي كنه و اگرچه حدودا دو قرن از عمرش مي گذره اما همچنان از منابع اصلي فهم حقوق اساسي بريتانياست كه البته مقايسه هاش با نظام حقوقي فرانسه و بلژيك مسير فهم رو هموارتر كرده.
يكي ديگه از نكات مهم اين كتاب نوع تعريفي است كه از "حكومت قانون" ارائه مي كنه چرا كه به نظردايسي حكومت قانون فراتر از صرف قانون ه و اون رو به نوحي روح قانون مي دونه.
خواندن اين كتاب به همراه "مباني حقوق عمومي" لاگلين بسيار راهگشاست
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews