Source: http://www.sultanazlanshah.com/the-sultan-azlan-shah-law-lectures
Timestamp: 2020-02-26 22:50:11
Document Index: 775244772

Matched Legal Cases: ['art 4', 'art 3', 'art 2', 'art 1', 'art 3', 'art 2', 'art 1']

The Sultan Azlan Shah Law Lectures honours His Royal Highness Sultan Azlan Shah’s commitment to the Rule of Law, Constitutional Supremacy and Good Governance.
Established to honour His Royal Highness Sultan Azlan Shah’s contribution to the Faculty of Law, University of Malaya specifically, and to the development of Malaysian law generally, especially so since Merdeka, the Sultan Azlan Shah Law Lectures was conceived and initiated by Professor Tan Sri Dato’ Seri Dr Visu Sinnadurai during his tenure as Dean of the Faculty of Law, University of Malaya (1983-1986). Since 1986, when the First Sultan Azlan Shah Law Lecture was delivered in Kuala Lumpur, distinguished Lord Chancellors, a Former British Prime Minister, Masters of the Rolls, Lords of Appeal in Ordinary, Justices of the UK Supreme Court, an Associate Justice of the US Supreme Court, a President of the New Zealand Court of Appeal, Queen’s Counsel and academics from the Commonwealth have been invited to partake in the premier law lecture series of Malaysia.
The eminent speakers, each conferring on the series the measure of prestige befitting its Patron, His Royal Highness Sultan Azlan Shah, have delivered authoritative, stimulating and thought-provoking lectures on a wide range of topics. The Sultan Azlan Shah Law Lectures has been described as “one of the most prestigious lecture series of the common law world.”
The First to Seventeenth Lectures were published in a volume entitled “The Sultan Azlan Shah Law Lectures: Judges on the Common Law” (Edited by Dato’ Seri Dr Visu Sinnadurai, Professional Law Books, 2004), the Eighteenth to Twenty-Fourth Lectures were published in a second volume entitled “The Sultan Azlan Shah Law Lectures II: Rule of Law, Written Constitutions & The Common Law Tradition” (Edited by Dato’ Seri Dr Visu Sinnadurai, RNS Publications, 2011), whilst the Twenty-Fifth to Twenty-Eighth Lectures were published in a volume entitled "His Royal Highness Sultan Azlan Shah: A Tribute" (Edited by Tan Sri Dr Visu Sinnadurai, RNS Publications, 2014). The full text of the individual Sultan Azlan Shah Law Lectures have been made available with the kind permission of the publishers, and may be accessed in the links provided below. The full videos for the Twenty-Fifth, Twenty-Seventh and Twenty-Eighth Sultan Azlan Shah Law Lectures have been made available with the kind permission of the Sultan Azlan Shah Foundation.
The Thirty-Third Sultan Azlan Shah Law Lecture, entitled "International Commerce: Mapping the Law in a Borderless World", was delivered on Tuesday, 5 November 2019 by The Rt Hon The Lord Briggs of Westbourne, Justice of the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom.
First Lecture (1986) | Professor WR Cornish
“Colour of Office”: Restitutionary Redress against Public Authority
Second Lecture (1987) | Professor AG Guest
Third Lecture (1988) | Lord Oliver of Aylmerton
Judicial Legislation: Retreat from Anns
Fourth Lecture (1989) | Lord Ackner
The Spycatcher: Why Was He Not Caught?
Fifth Lecture (1990) | Sir Robin Cooke
Administrative Law Trends in the Commonwealth
Sixth Lecture (1991) | Lord Mustill
Negligence in the World of Finance
Seventh Lecture (1992) | Lord Donaldson of Lymington
Commercial Disputes Resolution in the 90’s
Eighth Lecture (1993) | Lord Mackay of Clashfern
Commercial Fraud Trials: Some Recent Developments
Ninth Lecture (1994) | Lord Keith of Kinkel
The Modern Approach to Tax Avoidance
Tenth Lecture (1995) | Lord Browne-Wilkinson
Equity and Commercial Law: Do They Mix?
Eleventh Lecture (1996) | Lord Steyn
Contract Law: Fulfilling the Reasonable Expectations of Honest Men
Twelfth Lecture (1997) | Lord Woolf
Judicial Review of Financial Institutions
Thirteenth Lecture (1998) | Lord Nolan
Certainty and Justice: The Demands on the Law in a Changing Environment
Fourteenth Lecture (1999) | Lord Slynn of Hadley
The Impact of Regionalism: The End of the Common Law?
Fifteenth Lecture (2000) | Lord Clyde
Construction of Commercial Contracts: Strict Law and Common Sense
Sixteenth Lecture (2001) | Lord Bingham of Cornhill
The Law as the Handmaid of Commerce
Seventeenth Lecture (2003) | Lord Phillips of Worth Matravers
Right to Privacy: The Impact of the Human Rights Act 1998
Eighteenth Lecture (2004) | Lord Saville of Newdigate
Information Technology: A Tool for Justice
Nineteenth Lecture (2005) | Cherie Booth QC
The Role of the Judge in a Human Rights World
Twentieth Lecture (2006) | Justice Anthony Kennedy
Written Constitutions and the Common Law Tradition
Twenty-First Lecture (2007) | Baroness Helena Kennedy of The Shaws QC
Legal Challenges in Our Brave New World
Twenty-Second Lecture (2008) | Tony Blair
Upholding the Rule of Law: A Reflection
Twenty-Third Lecture (2009) | Lord Mance of Frognal
The Changing Role of an Independent Judiciary
Twenty-Fourth Lecture (2010) | Lord Rodger of Earlsferry
Bias and Conflicts of Interests–Challenges for Today’s Decision-Makers
Read Part 4 Part 3 Part 2 Part 1
Twenty-Fifth Lecture (2011) | Lord Walker of Gestingthorpe
Would it have Made Any Difference? Cause and Effect in Commercial Law
Twenty-Sixth Lecture (2012) | Lord David Pannick QC
Read Part 3 Part 2 Part 1
Twenty-Seventh Lecture (2013) | Lord Sumption
Twenty-Eighth Lecture (2014) | Lord Carnwath of Notting Hill
Environmental Law in a Global Society
Twenty-Ninth Lecture (2015) | Lord Dyson
Is Judicial Review a Threat to Democracy?
Thirtieth Lecture (2016) | Baroness Hale of Richmond
The Supreme Court: Guardian of the Constitution?
Thirty-First Lecture (2017) | Lord Thomas
The Rule of Law, the Executive & the Judiciary
Thirty-Second Lecture (2018) | Lord Reed
Thirty-Third Lecture (2019) | Lord Briggs
International Commerce: Mapping the Law in a Borderless World