Workshop was held at the
Faculty of Law, National University of Singapore 31 Oct – 1 Nov 2016
This workshop placed the spotlight on
a series of recent, new, or emerging theories
that seek to explain and/or justify
relationships between authorities exercising
public power inside the state. It addressed
themes that either bolster or challenge the
orthodoxy of the 'separation of powers' approach
to relationships between courts, legislatures,
and executives, as well as exploring the range
of forms and locations of state authority that
exist outside of those branches of government.
Questions addressed include:
- should state authority be understood and
valuated monolithically or pluralistically?
- what explains the relationships between
bearers of the state's authority? Does
'separation of powers' suffice or is there
promise in models such as 'Shared Authority'
(Kyritsis, 2014) 'Diffusion or
Concentration' (Cane, 2016) and 'Relative
Authority' (Roughan 2013)
- What is the promise of models of
integration and interdependence, as opposed
to separation or demarcation?
- what forms does/should the state's
authority take, and do those forms have
implications for the way in which authority
is exercised or evaluated?
- what institutions can legitimately
exercise state authority, in what
combinations, with what impact for questions
of institutional design?
- what is the role of state authorities
vis-à-vis non-state authorities?
- what (if anything) distinguishes public
from private authority, and how does this
map on to theorizing about the state's
authority?
Participants in the Workshop include
Dean Knight (Victoria University of
Wellington)
Dimitrios Kyritsis (University of Reading)
Peter Cane (The Australian National
University, Canberra)
Arie Rosen (The University of Auckland)
Kristen Rundle (The University of Melbourne)
Farrah Ahmed (The University of Melbourne)
Greg Weeks (University of New South Wales)
Nicole Roughan (National University of
Singapore)
Swati Jhaveri (National University of
Singapore)
Michael Dowdle (National University of
Singapore)
Publications:
Nicole Roughan, The Official Point of View and the Official Claim to Authority,
Oxford Journal of Legal Studies, Volume 38, Issue 2, Summer 2018, Pages 191–216
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1093/ojls/gqy010
Dimitrios Kyritsis, Dynamic Separation
of Powers in Dimitrios Kyritsis Where Our Protection Lies: Separation of Powers
and Constitutional Review (OUP, Jul 2017) DOI:
https://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199672257.003.0009
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Programme Schedule
Photo Gallery |