Abstract Retrospective legislation—laws that alter the legal consequences of actions committed before their enactment—poses a persistent challenge to the foundational principles of the rule of law. This article provides a doctrinal and comparative analysis of retrospective statutes, employing a dual analytical framework that examines the tension they create between parliamentary sovereignty and the requirements of legal certainty, non-arbitrariness, and fairness through both rule of law principles and human rights considerations. While the UK constitutional tradition recognizes the supremacy of Parliament to legislate retrospectively, this power remains controversial, especially when viewed through the lens of Diceyan orthodoxy and more recent conceptions of the rule of law articulated by Lord Bingham. The article begins by distinguishing between criminal and civil retrospective laws, and between truly and apparently retrospective measures, while acknowledging important exceptions such as war crimes legislation and curative retrospective laws. It then critically assesses leading UK case law, including Burmah Oil, War Damage Act 1965, ex parte Pierson, AXA General Insurance Ltd v HM Advocate, and recent legislation such as the Northern Ireland Troubles (Legacy and Reconciliation) Act 2023 and the Post Office (Horizon System) Offences Act 2024, to examine the judiciary’s evolving stance on the legitimacy and limits of retrospective legislation. The discussion is enriched by a comparative perspective, drawing on legal frameworks in the European Union, Germany, and the USA—selected to represent distinct constitutional approaches ranging from formal prohibition to principle-based limitation—each of which imposes constitutional or judicial constraints on retroactive law-making. The article demonstrates that retrospective legislation is not inherently illegitimate but requires careful justification and procedural safeguards. The UK’s flexible constitutional order, while pragmatic, lacks sufficient institutional mechanisms to prevent the misuse of retrospective legislation, particularly in contexts involving fundamental rights or punitive effects. Rather than advocating for absolute prohibition, the article concludes by proposing enhanced procedural constraints, clearer doctrinal guidance, and the potential development of soft constitutional principles that can guide both Parliament and the judiciary in ensuring retrospective law-making remains exceptional, transparent, and aligned with rule of law values. The analysis reveals that the future of responsible retrospective legislation lies not in categorical prohibition but in principled governance through reason, clarity, and institutional accountability.
Dauren Makhambetsaliyev (Mon,) studied this question.