Zusammenfassung der Ressource
(1) The rule of law and
the role's of Judges
- The rule of laws
- Laws should rule
- It should be applied to the
conducts and behaviour of all
- Ensure a "government of laws"
and not a "government of men"
- Sub-principles are:
- No one is above the law
- Applies to public officials and private citizens (up
held through administration laws, body of law)
- Many of the power of the PM and ministers are based on
Royal Prerogative, which isn't subject to judicial oversight
- Parliamentary privilege means that MPs and peers are not
subject to legal restrictions on what they can say in Parliament
- The Queen, as head of the legal system,
is not properly subject to the law
- Parliament is sovereign and so in
this sense is above the law
- Equality before the law
- Everyone has access
to legal system
- Legal disputes may be costly and so
prohibits those who cannot afford a top lawyer
- Judges may be biased against, for example, women,
ethnic minorities, or the poor because they come from
a privileged educational narrow social background
- Law is always applied
- Punishment only for breaches of laws and so no-one is
penalised excerpt though the process of law
- Police resources may be limited and
so many crimes may go undetected
- "Trial by media" means people may be
"punished" without legal proceedings having taken
place, despite, in some cases, being acquitted
- Legal redress is available
though the courts
- If people rights have been infringed, they have a right to
protect themselves through the law (safeguard from the state)
- Not all crimes are reported and
therefore are not legally addressed
- There is no entrenched bill of rights
to protect fundamental human rights
- The Human Rights Act, 1998, can
be set aside if Parliament wishes
- Access to the European Court of Human
Rights is expensive and time-consuming
- What do judges do
- Preside over
court proceedings
- In this role, Judges make sure that the rules of
court procedure are properly followed by both sides
in a case. There Job is to ensure a "Fair Trial"
- Interpet and apply the law
- This, in most cases, means that they interpret statutes
laid down by Parliament. However, this can lead to
conflicing interpretations by judges and by minister
- "Make" laws, in certian cases
- In a sense, all law is "judge made" law. This is because
laws ultimately mean what judges say they mean. common
laws, which is particularly important in the English legal
tradition, is built upon the basis of judicial precedent
- Decide sentencing
in criminal cases
- This is further important area of discretion, as judges have
traditionally had a free hand in deciding what sentence to hand
out. Neverless, this in recent year, as a result of the wider use
of minimally or mandatory sentence
- Chair public inquires
and commissions
- Judges are used for this purpose because of their
reputation for being independent and impartial. Such a role
has also led to criticism, however. In chairing inquires,
judges inevitably come into close contact with ministers
and senior officials, and this may compromise their
independence and tend to give them a pro-government bias
- Lord Leveson inquiry
into press standers