Acknowledgements
I would like to express my deep gratitude to David Beatty, who supervised the doctoral thesis from which this monograph developed, for all his support and encouragement, and in particular for our many vigorous debates which were invaluable in crystallising the arguments presented here.
I also wish to acknowledge my considerable intellectual debt to Harry Arthurs, who first showed me that all law is plural, and who has remained an influential, and patient, teacher over the years. I thank the following for giving generously with helpful comments and advice: Upendra Baxi, Damian Chalmers, Sujit Choudhry, David Dyzenhaus, Bob Hancke, Allan Hutchinson, Rod Macdonald, Patrick Macklem, Martin Rhodes, Scott Veitch, and Neil Walker. I am very grateful to Paul Harvey for research assistance and his help in bringing the project to completion. Thanks are also due to the Schools of Law at the Universities of Warwick and Glasgow, where conversations with colleagues were important in shaping the ideas of this book, for study leave, and; to the Faculty of Law, University of Toronto, and the Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies, European University Institute, each for providing a stimulating working environment for researching and writing this book. Special thanks to Alasdair Gray for permission to reprint his illustrations from Lanark on the cover. I would finally like to thank Richard Hart, Mel Hamill and Hart Publishing for their support and assistance in the preparation and publication of the manuscript.
Source:
Anderson Gavin W.. Constitutional Rights after Globalization. Hart Publishing,2005. — 155 p.. 2005
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