Draft affirmative remedial order Decision
2 October 2000 -
A remedial order is an order made by a minister under the Human Rights Act 1998 to amend legislation which has been found incompatible with the European Convention on Human Rights. Remedial orders can be used to amend both primary and secondary legislation, and they may do anything necessary to fix the incompatibility with the Convention rights. Draft remedial orders are considered by the Joint Committee on Human Rights and then need to be approved by both Houses to become law.
Follows the calculation style Bicameral instruments (clock stops if either House rises).
There are 70 steps.
- AA Decision
- AB Decision
- AC Decision
- AI Decision
- AJ Decision
- AK Decision
- AL Decision
- ALM AA Decision
- ALM AB Decision
- ALM AC Decision
- ALM AD Decision
- ALM AE Decision
- ALM AF Decision
- ALM AG Decision
- ALM AH Decision
- ALM AI Decision
- ALM AJ Decision
- ALM AK Decision
- ALM AL Decision
- ALM AM Decision
- ALM AN Decision
- ALM AO Decision
- ALM AP Decision
- ALM AQ Decision
- ALM AR Decision
- ALM AX Decision
- ALM AY Decision
- ALM AZ Decision
- ALM BA Decision
- ALM BB Decision
- AM Decision
- AN Decision
- AO Decision
- AP Decision
- AQ Decision
- AR Decision
- AS Decision
- AT Decision
- AU Decision
- BK Decision
- BL Decision
- BM Decision
- BN Decision
- BO Decision
- BP Decision
- BQ Decision
- BR Decision
- BS Decision
- BT Decision
- BU Decision
- BV Decision
- BX Decision
- BY Decision
- DACM AA Decision
- DACM AB Decision
- DACM AC Decision
- DACM AD Decision
- DACM AE Decision
- DACM AF Decision
- DACM AG Decision
- DACM AH Decision
- DACM AI Decision
- DACM AJ Decision
- DACM AK Decision
- DACM AL Decision
- DACM AM Decision
- EVEL CERT AA Decision
- EVEL CERT AB Decision
- EVEL CERT AC Decision
- EVEL CERT AD Decision