Conference was held at the
Faculty of Law, National University of Singapore
13-14 April 2015
On April 13-14, NUS Law hosted an
international workshop to look at Martin Loughlin’s recent Foundations of Public Law
(Oxford University Press, 2010). Foundations is
‘an account of the foundation of the discipline
of public law with a view to identifying its
essential character’. This book effectively
refines the Anglophone discipline of public law,
changing it from a court-centric doctrinal
jurisprudence concerned with judicial review of
state actions into what Loughlin refers to as a
‘political jurisprudence’ (a political
‘grammar’). The result is Anglophone legal
world’s most ambitious attempt to affirmatively
locate the place and role of politics in the
national constitutional-legal order.
The workshop critically examine Foundations
from a variety of perspectives, include
theoretical perspective (e.g., the theory of the
state, constitutional theory, the theory of
political jurisprudence); the perspectives of
particular regimes (e.g., ‘global-southern’
experience, the legal transnationalization, the
EU); and from critical perspectives (.e.g.,
economic constitutionalism, the public-private
divide, pluralism).
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Programme Schedule
Photo Gallery
Book Publication |