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LLB essay
The courts have no role in law making; thay merely decide the outcome of cases. Could anyone discuss this statement?
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No best answer has yet been selected by Ellena101. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Well said bednobs.
Ellena - if you are doing an LLB, I would expect that you have at least access to a basic law library and have been given the basics in legal research. Although this sounds like a "first year" question, I would still expect anyone doing the LLB to be able to understand to some extent the role the courts play in our legal system.
Have a think and post some ideas and you might find people willing to help. People will not do your homework for you though. As a starter, try thinking about things such as statutory/judicial interpretation, common law, rules of equity, House of Lords as an appellate body etc.
Ellena - if you are doing an LLB, I would expect that you have at least access to a basic law library and have been given the basics in legal research. Although this sounds like a "first year" question, I would still expect anyone doing the LLB to be able to understand to some extent the role the courts play in our legal system.
Have a think and post some ideas and you might find people willing to help. People will not do your homework for you though. As a starter, try thinking about things such as statutory/judicial interpretation, common law, rules of equity, House of Lords as an appellate body etc.
If you are doing an LLB I would hope you would have some idea about common law, statute law etc! By the way, you don't necessarily have to fully agree with the statement. Set out how laws are made, what the role of the court is, arguments for the statement and arguments against, then do a conclusion
I'm with the others I'm afraid, sounds like first year LLB and if you don't have the motivation to look up answer to very simple questions like these, you're going to find the next few years very hard going I'm afraid.
As also said, people are more than willing to help if there is something in particular you get stuck on or find hard to understand.
As also said, people are more than willing to help if there is something in particular you get stuck on or find hard to understand.
If you want any good basic guides to form a skeleton to an essay, the Nutshells books are pretty good.
They are pretty simple but form a good start which you can then fill out.
One for Legal System here...
http://www.amazon.co.uk/English-Legal-System-N utshells-Darbyshire/dp/0421958308/ref=sr_1_8?i e=UTF8&s=books&qid=1236631494&sr=1-8
Just wanted to check they were still going and covering the same stuff as a while since I did my LLB.
They are pretty simple but form a good start which you can then fill out.
One for Legal System here...
http://www.amazon.co.uk/English-Legal-System-N utshells-Darbyshire/dp/0421958308/ref=sr_1_8?i e=UTF8&s=books&qid=1236631494&sr=1-8
Just wanted to check they were still going and covering the same stuff as a while since I did my LLB.
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