2. Parliamentary Sovereignty in a Changing Constitutional Landscape

M. Elliott
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Abstract

Parliamentary sovereignty is often presented as the central principle of the United Kingdom’s constitution. In this sense, it might be thought to be a constant: a fixed point onto which we can lock, even when the constitution is otherwise in a state of flux. That the constitution presently is—and has for some time been— in a state of flux is hard to dispute. Over the last half-century or so, a number of highly significant developments have occurred, including the UK’s joining— and now leaving—the European Union; the enactment of the Human Rights Act 1998; the devolution of legislative and administrative authority to new institutions in Belfast, Cardiff and Edinburgh; and the increasing prominence accorded by the courts to the common law as a repository of fundamental constitutional rights and values. Each of these developments raises important questions about the doctrine of parliamentary sovereignty. The question might be thought of in terms of the doctrine’s capacity to withstand, or accommodate, developments that may, at least at first glance, appear to be in tension with it. Such an analysis seems to follow naturally if we are wedded to an orthodox, and perhaps simplistic, account of parliamentary sovereignty, according to which the concept is understood in unyielding and absolutist terms: as something that is brittle, and which must either stand or fall in the face of changing circumstances. Viewed from a different angle, however, the developments of recent years and decades might be perceived as an opportunity to think about parliamentary sovereignty in a different, and arguably more useful, way—by considering how the implications of this still-central concept are being shaped by the changing nature of the constitutional landscape within which it sits. That is the task with which this chapter is concerned.
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2. 不断变化的宪法格局中的议会主权
议会主权经常被认为是英国宪法的核心原则。从这个意义上说,它可以被认为是一个常数:一个我们可以锁定的固定点,即使当结构处于不稳定状态时。宪法目前——而且已经有一段时间了——处于不断变化的状态,这是毋庸置疑的。在过去半个世纪左右的时间里,发生了许多非常重要的事态发展,包括英国加入——现在又退出——欧盟;颁布了《1998年人权法》;立法和行政权力下放到贝尔法斯特、卡迪夫和爱丁堡的新机构;法院日益重视普通法作为基本宪法权利和价值观的宝库。这些发展都提出了关于议会主权原则的重要问题。这个问题可能被认为是根据学说的能力来承受,或适应,至少乍一看,似乎与之紧张的发展。如果我们执著于一种正统的、或许过于简单化的议会主权解释,那么这种分析似乎自然会随之而来,根据这种解释,议会主权的概念被理解为不屈的、绝对主义的术语:是一种脆弱的东西,面对不断变化的环境,它要么屹立,要么倒下。然而,从另一个角度来看,最近几年和几十年的发展可能被视为一个机会,以一种不同的,可以说更有用的方式来思考议会主权——通过考虑这个仍然是核心概念的含义是如何被它所在的宪法景观的变化性质所塑造的。这就是本章所要讨论的任务。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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