Abstract
Drawing upon and developing Chris Newdick’s work on legal regulation of resource allocation in healthcare, this article analyses a series of problematic judicial review cases in the English courts, in which judges appear to move away from scrutiny of procedure towards a form of review that is much more substantive in nature. The ‘priority-setting rights matrix’, which Newdick developed in later work, enables us distinguish these cases from others, calling into question the claim that the jurisprudence in this field has evolved in a linear fashion. However, while the matrix has considerable value as a classificatory tool, it requires supplementation if we are to understand why judges respond differently in distinct scenarios. To this end, the article explores potential reasons for judicial preference for individual interests over collective priority-setting goals, which may explain the shift away from procedural review which characterises these cases.
Original language | English |
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Journal | Northern Ireland Legal Quarterly |
Publication status | Accepted/In press - 10 May 2024 |
Keywords
- Judicial review – priority-setting – procedural and substantive review – identifiability – rights