Inheriting the royals: royal chartered bodies in Ireland after 1922
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Published:2024-08-08
Issue:2
Volume:75
Page:331-369
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ISSN:2514-4936
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Container-title:Northern Ireland Legal Quarterly
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language:
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Short-container-title:NILQ
Abstract
The establishment of the Irish Free State (Saorstát Éireann) in 1922 did not occur on a blank canvas. A slew of administrative bodies and agencies with pre-1922 origins now found themselves under a new jurisdiction, still familiar in some respects but alien in others. The Irish State Administration Database indicates that the functions performed by these pre-1922 bodies included the delivery of public services and regulatory oversight. The resilience of pre-1922 bodies arguably ensured a greater degree of day-to-day administrative continuity and stability after 1922 than may otherwise have been the case.This article focuses on a particular subset of these pre-1922 entities – royal chartered bodies – carried into Saorstát Éireann and beyond. Of special interest are the peculiar legal mechanisms through which these bodies were sustained in an altered constitutional landscape. The discontinuation of a pre-1922 royal prerogative to grant and amend royal charters presented legal conundrums for royal chartered bodies and the state. This was mitigated through a mixture of tailored public and private legislation of the Oireachtas. These dynamics are interrogated through the lenses of temporality and legal pluralism.
Publisher
School of Law, Queen's University Belfast
Cited by
1 articles.
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