Bad Laws: An Explosive Analysis of Britain's Petty Rules, Health and Safety Lunacies, and Madcap Laws is a book written by Philip Johnston and published by Constable in 2010. Foster thought it expert and merciless.[1] Appleton called it "thorough and persuasive".[2]
Author | Philip Johnson |
---|---|
Publication date | 2010 |
ISBN | 9781849014304 |
See also
editReferences
edit- Johnston, Phillip. Bad Laws: An Explosive Analysis of Britain's Petty Rules, Health and Safety Lunacies, and Madcap Laws. Constable. ISBN 9781849014304. 2010. Google Books.
- Allfree, Claire. Bad Laws exposes the flaws that curtail individual freedom (Book review of "Bad Laws"). Metro. 6 April 2010.
- Wilson, Ben. Bad Laws: An Explosive Analysis of Britain's Petty Rules, Health and Safety Lunacies and Madcap Laws by Philip Johnston: review". The Telegraph. 13 April 2010. Also serialised in "Bad laws: Labour has clowned around with our freedom" and "How do we win back our freedom".
- Sutton, Henry. "Bad Laws by Philip Johnston" in The Ticket. April 2010 archives. The Mirror.
- Crawley, William. "A Summer of Books" in Will & Testament. BBC. 1 August 2010.
- ^ Foster, Charles. "Britain--the over-governed society" (Book review of Bad Laws). Contemporary Review. 22 December 2010. Highbeam Research The Free Library Bibliography of Foster's articles Archived 2015-04-19 at the Wayback Machine.
- ^ Appleton, Josie. Send in the Clown's: Britain's Bizarre New Laws. Spiked. December 2010.