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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 January 2018
1. See Hadfield B and E Weaver Trends in Judicial Review in Northern Ireland 1994 Public Law, pp 12–16 and ‘Judicial Review in Perspective 46 Northern Ireland Legal Quarterly (1995) pp 113–145, and T Mullen, T Prosser and K Pick Judicial Review in Scotland (1996).
2. M Beloff and T Kerr Why Aga Khan is Wrong’ [1996] JR 30.
3. Ibid. For a most valuable exposition of this point in a Northern Ireland case, see In Re Phillips (otherwise cited as R v Secretary of State. ex p Phillips). Unreported, Queen's Bench Division (Crown Side), judgment delivered by Carswell LJ 18 January 1995. (See p 20 of the transcript: ‘For my own part I would regard it as a preferable approach to consider the nature of the issue itself and whether it has the characteristics which import an element of public law…’). Carswell LJ's judgment was affirmed by the Northern Ireland Court of Appeal on 12 February 1996.
4. In ‘The Problematical State of Access to Judicial Review’ chapter I in B Hadfield (ed) Judicial Review: A Thematic Approach (1995).
5. See, eg. G Richardson and M Sunkin ‘Judicial Review: Questions of Impact’ 1996 Public Law, pp 79–103.