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constitution

The Quill Project Conventions Podcast
Captioned

Poor Lord Wensleydale: A Beginner's Guide to the British Constitution with Robert Saunders

Grace Mallon and Nicholas Cole talk to Robert Saunders about what makes Britain's constitution unique and what challenges it faces in a turbulent period for UK politics and government.
The Quill Project Conventions Podcast

Accident and Force: Making American Constitutions with Nicholas Cole

Grace Mallon and Nicholas Cole discuss how a historian learns to code, where the idea of a Constitutional Convention came from, and what's next for the Quill Project.
Africa Oxford Initiative

A Forum for Reason: Reflections on the Role of South Africa’s Constitutional Court

Prof Kate O'Regan, Director, Bonavero Institute of Human Rights and a former judge of the South African Constitutional Court, gives a talk for the Africa Oxford Initiative.
Asian Studies Centre

Directive Principles and the Expressive Accommodation of Ideological Dissenters in the Indian Constitution

Tarunabh Khaitan speaks at the South Asia Seminar on 17 January 2017
Foundation for Law, Justice and Society

Putney Debates 2017 - Session IV: Preserving the Liberal Constitution

The Putney Debates 2017 addresses the UK's constitutional future in the wake of the vote to leave the European Union.
Foundation for Law, Justice and Society

Putney Debates 2017 - Session III: Parliament, the Executive, the Courts and the Rule of Law

The Putney Debates 2017 addresses the UK's constitutional future in the wake of the vote to leave the European Union.
Foundation for Law, Justice and Society

Putney Debates 2017 - Session II: Changing and Strengthening the Role of the People

The Putney Debates 2017 addresses the UK's constitutional future in the wake of the vote to leave the European Union.
Foundation for Law, Justice and Society

Putney Debates 2017 - Session I: Parliament and the People

The Putney Debates 2017 addresses the UK's constitutional future in the wake of the vote to leave the European Union.
Foundation for Law, Justice and Society

Constitutionalism without Consensus in Contemporary Turkey

Bill Kissane, Associate Professor in Politics, London School of Economics and Political Science, gives a talk for the FLJS seminar series.
Foundation for Law, Justice and Society

Beyond the Liberal Constitution: The United States - Taking the Bullying Pulpit

John W Adams, Adjunct Professor of Political Science, Rutgers University, gives a talk for the FLJS seminar series.
Foundation for Law, Justice and Society

European Voices of Dissent and the Constitutional Consequences for the European Union

Professor Paul Craig, Professor in English Law, Oxford, gives a talk for the FLJS seminar series.
Foundation for Law, Justice and Society

The Constitution in Crisis 2016

Professor Denis Galligan, Professor of Socio-Legal Studies and Fellow of Wolfson College at the University of Oxford, gives a talk for the FLJS Seminar Series.
Foundation for Law, Justice and Society

From Locke on Toleration to the First Amendment

Professor Dan Robinson gives a talk on the First Amendment in the US Constitution and the philosophy of John Locke.
Journey of a Molecular Detective; David Sherratt

The Making of a Constitution: Pakistan and the Question of Sovereignty

The speaker analyses the concept of 'sovereignty' as presented in the Objectives Resolution of Pakistan presented to the Constituent Assembly in March 1949
Asian Studies Centre

The Making of a Constitution: Pakistan and the Question of Sovereignty

Dr Yaqoob Khan Bangash gives a talk on Pakistan and it's constitutional sovereignty on 19th January 2016.
Law Faculty Podcasts

When Lawyers Lie: Forging an English Constitution in 1399

Professor David Seipp, Boston University School of Law, gives a talk on 'Forging the English Constitution in 1938. The talk was recorded on 10th March 2015.
Law Faculty Podcasts

Adapting to a Constitution: The Hong Kong Basic Law turns 25

Geoffrey Ma, The Chief Justice of Hong Kong - 12 May 2015
Foundation for Law, Justice and Society

Constitutional Instability : The Case of Central and Eastern Europe - The Break-Up of Nations: The Constitutional Dimensions Using Ukraine as a Case Study

Daniel Smilov, Political Science Department, University of Sofia; and Programme Director, Centre for Liberal Strategies, Sofia, gives a lecture at the The Break-Up of Nations Roundtable discussion, held at Wolfson College on 28th November 2014.
Latin American Centre

Writing Rights in Early Latin American Constitutions

On February 28th, Dr James Melton from the University College London presented his recent findings of a research project producing a cross-national historical dataset of written constitutions.
The Engagement of Theory

The growing clamour for a codified constitution of the UK (or what is left after Scotland leaves)

Iain McLean asks for a rethink of the structure of the law of the United Kingdom after A.V. Dicey

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