...a valuable and significant addition to the literature on the Human Rights Act 1998 (HRA) and its role in the UK Constitution. It is engagingly written and contains clear and convincing analysis throughout. The book will be of great interest to academics working on constitutional law and/or human rights and will also be of value to students wishing to look beyond the more superficial reconciliation of parliamentary sovereignty and the HRA found in many constitutional law textbooks. ...an academically valuable, as well as a very interesting book. It encouraged me to look at some topics in a new light and the focus on the significant role of interpretation, and on the potential of democratic dialogue, is welcome. ...the arguments and analysis in this work deserve to be read and widely so. Elizabeth Wicks European Public Law Volume 17, Number 1 ...the argument Young makes is a coherent and convincing one. Her discussion in chapter five of the sadly under-used theory of democratic dialogue in the context of the HRA is extremely compelling, with an admirable eye for the details of how dialogue would work. C.J.S Knight The Cambridge Law Journal Vol 68 (2) July 2009 ...the book deserves reading (and re-reading) for the detailed analysis of parliamentary sovereignty. Rory O'Connell Law and Politics Book Review Vol 19, No 9, September 2009 Young's book provides an interesting account of what has been a significant point of constitutional interest The book is very well written, providing a welcome and refreshing justification for Dicey's principle of parliamentary sovereignty in view of one of the most dramatic qualifications to have been introduced since the Parliament Act 1911. The book represents a well-written and well-argued account of the way in which parliamentary sovereignty related to the Human Rights Act 1998 and which makes a significant contribution to the academic field of constitutional law. John Stanton Legal Studies Issue 4, 2010