We use cookies on this site to provide you with an informative and engaging experience and also to help us to continually improve our site for you. Without allowing cookies certain features of the site will not be available. To learn more about how we use cookies, please view our cookie policy. By clicking on ‘I AGREE’, you consent to our use of cookies on this device in accordance with our policy.

Logo of Wolters Kluwer, Kluwer Law Online
European Public Law
Search content button

Home > All journals > European Public Law > 25(4) >

Statutory Interpretation and the Role of the Courts after Brexit

Cover image ofEuropean Public Law

$15.00 - Rental (PDF) *

$29.00 - Article (PDF) *

*service fee may apply
Statutory Interpretation and the Role of the Courts after Brexit


European Public Law
Volume 25, Issue 4 (2019) pp. 637 – 664

https://doi.org/10.54648/euro2019034



Abstract

This article evaluates the impact of the European Union (Withdrawal) Act 2018 on statutory interpretation and on the role of the courts in the United Kingdom. The Act’s new interpretative obligations create a myriad of issues that will occupy litigants and courts in the future. I explain how the complexities of the Act should be disentangled and how courts should exercise their policy choices under the terms of the Act. I show that the assumption that Brexit is a clear break from EU law is in several respects contradicted by the detail of the legislative scheme. The European Union (Withdrawal) Act 2018 (EUWA)’s strong theme of legal continuity has the consequence that domestic law will remain considerably intertwined and aligned with EU law after exit day. I also demonstrate that the 2018 Act adjusts the relationship between the courts and Parliament in a way that is not foreseen. EU membership has shaped this relationship and Brexit does not mean that it is profoundly restructured. The Act has the potential to strengthen rather than weaken the institutional and constitutional position of the courts.    


Keywords

European Union (Withdrawal) Act 2018, Brexit, Supreme Court, retained EU law, judicial law-making, statutory interpretation, parliamentary sovereignty.


Extract




Subscribe to this journal

Interested in a subscription? Contact our sales team

Browse by practice area
Share
Stay up to date


RSSETOC