During law school, she worked as the research assistant to the Dean of the Faculty of Law at the University of Waikato, New Zealand, updating and rewriting a book
chapter on constitutional law.
Accordingly the book opens with a part
on EU
Constitutional Law, which ends however with a short
chapter on judicial review of the constitutionality of EU legislation, that almost naturally launches the series of articles
on the EU Judicial Architecture in Part II, which in turn leads to Part III
on Judicial Protection of Individuals.
Rather, we focus
on two key and interlocking
chapters that address the legal nature and
constitutional status of the new body of domestic
law — «retained EU
law» — that the Bill will create.