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The rise of judicial diplomacy in the UK: aims and challenges

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 October 2019

Gregory Davies*
Affiliation:
Wales Governance Centre, Cardiff University, Cardiff, UK
*
*Author e-mail: [email protected]

Abstract

This paper examines the aims and challenges of ‘judicial diplomacy’ in the form of bilateral meetings between UK and supranational judges. Drawing from in-depth interviews, extra-judicial writings and other documentary sources, it argues that judicial diplomacy has become an important feature of the work of senior judges in the UK, allowing them to pursue jurisprudential and strategic aims. In jurisprudential terms, the judges have sought to improve the quality of judicial decision-making at the domestic and supranational levels. Strategically, they have striven to maintain robust inter-institutional relations and maximise their influence at the supranational level. The pursuit of these aims has taken on renewed significance in the context of Brexit but may raise questions for the protection of judicial independence and impartiality. The judiciaries should therefore consider steps to improve the visibility of these interactions and their value.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Society of Legal Scholars 2019

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Footnotes

I would like to thank Phil Fennell and Jiří Přibáň for supervising the doctoral research from which this paper was developed. I also wish to thank Daniel Wincott, David Feldman, Benjamin Yong, Hélène Tyrrell, Aleks Ford and two anonymous reviewers for their constructive comments on earlier versions. I am also grateful to the Economic and Social Research Council for its support in funding this work, ESRC grant, ‘Between Two Unions: The Constitutional Future of the Islands after Brexit’, ES/P009441/1.

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76 ‘Case law can be much richer and, as a consequence, more useful to practitioners and members of the public, when it has been the subject of prior discussion between judges from different jurisdictions’. Arden, above n 12.

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81 R Clayton ‘Smoke and mirrors: the Human Rights Act and the impact of Strasbourg case law’ [2012] PL 639 at 656.

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83 R (Sturnham) v Parole Board for England and Wales [2013] 2 AC 254.

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86 Interview with Justice 2, above n 82.

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89 Arden, above n 15, p 286.

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91 Interview with ECtHR Judge 3 of the European Court of Human Rights (Strasbourg, France, 29 May 2015).

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119 Protocol 16 to the European Convention on Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms. The UK Supreme Court, the Court of Appeal of England and Wales, the Court of Session, the High Court of Justiciary and the Northern Ireland Court of Appeal have expressed an interest in joining the SCN. See https://www.echr.coe.int/pages/home.aspx?p=court/network&c= (last accessed 27 August 2019).

120 HL Constitution Committee, above n 12.

121 European Union (Withdrawal) Act (EUWA) 2018, ss 2–4.

122 Withdrawal Agreement, above n 13.

123 House of Lords Select Committee on the Constitution, ‘Evidence session with the President and Deputy President of the Supreme Court’ (29 March 2017).

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136 R Hazell and P O'Brien ‘Meaningful dialogue: judicial engagement with Parliamentary committees at Westminster’ (2016) PL 54 at 72; R Hazell and J Wells ‘Judicial input into parliamentary legislation’ (2018) PL 106 at 127.

137 Hazell and O'Brien, ibid, at 72.

138 Daily Mail, above n 44.

139 The former ECtHR President, Dean Spielmann, spoke of the need for confidentiality as self-evident: ‘By the very nature of the exercise, the content of our exchanges is not placed on any public record’: Spielmann, above n 65.

140 Gee et al, above n 2, p 20.

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