An adjudicator is not a judge
Series: Building ; 265(8154) 22 September 2000, 64(1)Publication details: 2000Subject(s): Summary: Considers what implications the new Human Rights Act has for adjudicators. Confirms it only has jurisdiction over those whose work is of a public nature. Thus an adjudicator, who is a private person performing a private function merely for the parties to a contract, must remain outside the scope of the act. However, warns that the Act may have implications for any adjudicator who acts unfairly or impartially .| Item type | Current library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Barcode | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Journal article | London Journal article | ABS63001 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 108796-1001 |
Considers what implications the new Human Rights Act has for adjudicators. Confirms it only has jurisdiction over those whose work is of a public nature. Thus an adjudicator, who is a private person performing a private function merely for the parties to a contract, must remain outside the scope of the act. However, warns that the Act may have implications for any adjudicator who acts unfairly or impartially .