From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Supreme Court of Singapore, photographed in February 2007

Legitimate expectation

This is where the text in the section goes.

Let's create a bulleted list:

  • This is the first item
  • This is the second item.
  • This is the item after the second item. Now let's make a sub-list.
    • This is my sublist
    • Nice not?
    • Lucky my action not throttled
  1. This is the first item of a numbered list.
  2. This is the second item.
  3. This list has numbers.
    1. Wow so nice

This is a sub-section

so many subsections

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Illegality in administrative law

In XYZ v. ABC, the judge said:

I think that the defendant deserves to go to prison for a very, very long time.

To create bold text, do this: This will appear in bold. And to create bold, italicized text: Bold and italics


Irrationality in administrative law

The Old Supreme Court of Singapore

Swee law why this sub-section so nice

This is the sentence that requires a reference. [1]

This is a sentence that uses exactly the same reference as the first one. Cite error: The opening <ref> tag is malformed or has a bad name (see the help page). [2]

Creating another reference here. [3]

Now trying a citation to a chapter in a book. [4]

A citation to a statute. [5] Constitution of the Republic of Singapore ( 1985 Rev. Ed., 1999 Reprint)

Notes

  1. ^ The citation goes here.
  2. ^ R v. North and East Devon Health Authority, ex parte Coughlan [1999] EWCA Civ 1847, [2001] Q.B. 213, Court of Appeal (England and Wales).
  3. ^ Marbury v. Madison 5 U.S. 137 (1903), Supreme Court (United States).
  4. ^ Peter Leyland; Gordon Anthony (2009), "Wednesbury Unreasonableness, Proportionality, and Equality", Textbook on Administrative Law (6th ed.), Oxford, Mass.: Oxford University Press, pp. 284–312 at 308, ISBN  978-0-19-921776-2.
  5. ^ Internal Security Act ( Cap. 143, 1985 Rev. Ed.) ("ISA"), s. 8(1).
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Supreme Court of Singapore, photographed in February 2007

Legitimate expectation

This is where the text in the section goes.

Let's create a bulleted list:

  • This is the first item
  • This is the second item.
  • This is the item after the second item. Now let's make a sub-list.
    • This is my sublist
    • Nice not?
    • Lucky my action not throttled
  1. This is the first item of a numbered list.
  2. This is the second item.
  3. This list has numbers.
    1. Wow so nice

This is a sub-section

so many subsections

hi hi hi hi hi hi hi hi


Illegality in administrative law

In XYZ v. ABC, the judge said:

I think that the defendant deserves to go to prison for a very, very long time.

To create bold text, do this: This will appear in bold. And to create bold, italicized text: Bold and italics


Irrationality in administrative law

The Old Supreme Court of Singapore

Swee law why this sub-section so nice

This is the sentence that requires a reference. [1]

This is a sentence that uses exactly the same reference as the first one. Cite error: The opening <ref> tag is malformed or has a bad name (see the help page). [2]

Creating another reference here. [3]

Now trying a citation to a chapter in a book. [4]

A citation to a statute. [5] Constitution of the Republic of Singapore ( 1985 Rev. Ed., 1999 Reprint)

Notes

  1. ^ The citation goes here.
  2. ^ R v. North and East Devon Health Authority, ex parte Coughlan [1999] EWCA Civ 1847, [2001] Q.B. 213, Court of Appeal (England and Wales).
  3. ^ Marbury v. Madison 5 U.S. 137 (1903), Supreme Court (United States).
  4. ^ Peter Leyland; Gordon Anthony (2009), "Wednesbury Unreasonableness, Proportionality, and Equality", Textbook on Administrative Law (6th ed.), Oxford, Mass.: Oxford University Press, pp. 284–312 at 308, ISBN  978-0-19-921776-2.
  5. ^ Internal Security Act ( Cap. 143, 1985 Rev. Ed.) ("ISA"), s. 8(1).

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