Two grids on the same template. The first is empty - print it, fill in each cell with a one-line note while you revise. The second is a worked example to check yourself against.
Each cell asks one question: does this case strengthen the column quality (mark +) or weaken it (mark -)? Then add a one-line note saying why. The plus and minus columns are deliberately not pre-printed - your judgement is the work.
| Case+ - | Independence | Neutrality | Activism | Defended Parliament | Defended rights | Govt complied | Significance |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Belmarsh (2004) |
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| Miller 1 (2017) |
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| Miller 2 / Cherry (2019) |
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| Begum (2021) |
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| Rwanda (2023) |
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| Safety of Rwanda Act (2024) |
| Case+ - | Independence | Neutrality | Activism | Defended Parliament | Defended rights | Govt complied | Significance |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Belmarsh (2004) |
+Law Lords ruled against Blair government on indefinite detention of foreign nationals under HRA. | +8-1 ruling across politically-appointed Lords - no party-line split. | +Declaration of incompatibility against a flagship anti-terror Act. | -Parliament had passed the law; this ruling pushed against parliamentary judgement on national security. | +Defended right to liberty and freedom from discrimination under HRA Article 5 + 14. | +Blair govt accepted; replaced with Prevention of Terrorism Act 2005 (control orders). | +The landmark HRA case; established the declaration-of-incompatibility regime in practice. |
| Miller 1 (2017) |
+Ruled against Conservative government on flagship Brexit issue despite huge political pressure. | +Court refused to be drawn on policy; ruled narrowly on the law of prerogative. | +Forced government to legislate before triggering Article 50 - a procedural intervention in the political process. | +Central point of the ruling - Parliament must legislate to trigger Article 50; protected Parliament's role. | -Not a rights case. | +Government complied; EU (Notification of Withdrawal) Act 2017 passed within months. | +Defined the limits of prerogative power over constitutional change. |
| Miller 2 / Cherry (2019) |
+11-0 against the government; tabloid attacks did not move the Court. | +Unanimous decision is the strongest single defence against the "political court" charge. | +First ruling on personal royal prerogative; critics (Sumption) called it overreach. | +The legal test was whether prorogation frustrated Parliament - explicit defence of Parliament's right to sit. | -Not a rights case directly. | +Parliament was recalled; prorogation was declared null and of no effect. | +High constitutional watershed - the boundary of the personal prerogative. |
| Begum (2021) |
+Court reached its own judgement; happened to side with the Home Secretary. | +Unanimous ruling on national-security grounds. | -The opposite of activism - used the language of judicial deference explicitly. | -Not relevant; about citizenship revocation. | -Begum lost; right of return denied. Strongest evidence that the Court can rule AGAINST individual rights. | +Government won; no compliance issue. | +Sets the modern deference test for national security cases. |
| Rwanda (2023) |
+Ruled against Conservative government on flagship asylum policy. | +Rooted ruling in legal test of safe-country status under Refugee Convention. | +Killed a major government policy that had been pursued for over a year. | -Not the central issue. | +Defended right to non-refoulement (Article 3 ECHR; refugee protection). | -Government responded with the Safety of Rwanda Act 2024 - statutory override. | +Forced Parliament to legislate around the Court - rare and politically high-profile. |
| Safety of Rwanda Act (2024) |
+Court accepted Parliament's response without push-back; shows independence of legal reasoning. | +Not a ruling - a statute - so neutrality is about the Court's quiet acceptance. | -The Court did not act here - the limit of activism is reached when Parliament speaks clearly. | +Demonstrated Parliament's last word - exactly what defenders of parliamentary sovereignty want. | -Statute disapplied parts of the HRA for Rwanda removals. | +Court accepted the statutory override - no further legal challenge. | +The proof that Parliament still has the last word over the courts. |