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From 1947 to 1963 some 2.3 million men were conscripted to do
national service. For some it was to prove the most exciting and
terrifying time of their lives, as many were sent to the Korean War
or to countries such as Palestine and Kenya where the terrorist
threat was ever-present. They faced death and learned about sex.
For others, it was a frustrating interference in their lives, made
all the more ridiculous by endless hours of square-bashing or
painting coal white. Tom Hickman shows just how varied were the
experiences of the recruits. By talking to over 80 veterans, he
recalls the hilarious and moving stories from those times, and
seeks to explain why the subject still causes debate more than 40
years on. Above all, The Call-Up is a portrait of a vanished era
that many still feel has something to teach us today.
For fans of Darkest Hour and Dunkirk, discover the story of Walter
H. Thompson, the man who saved Winston Churchill's life more than
once. Walter H. Thompson was Churchill's bodyguard from 1921 until
1945, brought back from retirement at the outbreak of war. Tom
Hickman's authorised biography draws heavily on extracts from a
manuscript recently discovered by his great-niece, in which
Thompson gives a unique insider's account of a number of occasions
on which Churchill's life was put seriously at risk and his
intervention was needed. After the war, Thompson married one of
Churchill's secretaries, and her recollections, as well as those of
surviving family members, are interwoven to tell the revelatory
inside story of life beside the Greatest Briton.
It is remarkable that 10 years after the Human Rights Act came into
effect, and with further reform possible, there are still no clear
answers to basic questions about the relationship between the Human
Rights Act, human rights principles and the common law. Such basic
questions include: what is the Human Rights Act? What is the
relationship between human rights principles and common law
doctrines in public law? Do traditional public law principles need
to be replaced? How has the Human Rights Act altered the
constitutional relationship between the courts, government and
Parliament in the UK? Public Law After the Human Rights Act
proposes answers to these questions. Unlike other books on the
Human Rights Act, the book looks beyond the Human Rights Act itself
to its effect on public law as a whole. The book articulates in
novel ways the relationship between the Act and administrative and
constitutional law. It suggests that the Human Rights Act has built
on the common law constitution. The discussion focuses on core
topics in modern public law, including, the constitutional status
of the Human Rights Act; the relationship between human rights and
the common law; the Human Rights Act's effect on central doctrines
of public law such as reasonableness, proportionality and process
review; the structure of public law in the human rights era;
derogation and emergencies; and the right of access to a court.
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