Richard Gordon KC, a member of Brick Court Chambers, London, is recognised as one of the UK's leading silks in administrative and public law and human rights. He is a Visiting Professor at University College London and at the Chinese University of Hong Kong. He has acted in many of the most important public law and human rights cases in recent years, and appears regularly before the House of Lords and Court of Appeal and in foreign jurisdictions as well as before the ECJ and European Court of Human Rights.
... a must-read for anyone who wants to get a modern grip of our constitutional angst ... should be mandatory reading for those who want to think about this issue properly. -- Ian Caplin * Times Online * ... an outstanding piece of constitutional scholarship... it will be impossible for anyone to seriously engage with the debate about moving to a written constitution without having digested and considered Richard Gordon’s work. -- C.J.S. Knight * Public Law, Issue 3 * [an] interesting and thought-provoking book...Creative and imaginative thinking -- John Jackson * Open Democracy * His observations and explanatory remarks contain some valuable insights. Practitioners and students of law and politics will find much of interest in this book. -- Jean McFadden * SCOLAG Legal Journal, Issue 409 * ... a coherent and well constructed argument in favour of a written constitution. It is a succinct yet masterful combination of politics, philosophy, constitutional theory, law and history, accessible to lawyers and non-lawyers alike. It is a must read for anyone interested in the future of the UK constitution. -- Qudsi Rasheed * JUSTICE Journal, Volume 7, Number 1 * In this work Gordon combines his expertise as a QC - specialising in administrative and public law and human rights - with an historical approach, to produce an argument about the need for change in the UK constitution, and a set of proposals about what it should become...it is informative and enjoyable to read, and fulfils its purpose well, in that it makes an effective case for a written constitution and could form a useful basis for discussions of what such an entity should comprise. -- Andrew Blick * Open Democracy * This book will enable even those unfamiliar with the complexities of the current system to discuss, and formulate views about, the issues. -- Dawn Oliver * International Journal of Law in Context, Volume 6, Issue 4 * [An] excellent example of the craft of the legal scholar and the political scientist [which] deserves close reading. -- Arthur Aughey * Parliamentary Affairs *