Global Administrative Law (GAL) Scholarship
In: Research Handbook on Global Administrative Law, ed. by Sabino Cassese, Edward Elgar, 2016
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In: Research Handbook on Global Administrative Law, ed. by Sabino Cassese, Edward Elgar, 2016
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In: Administrative Law: A Contemporary Approach, West, 2009. ISBN-13: 978-0314191038
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Working paper
Modern directions of development of administrative law are examined in the article. Priority directions of development of home administrative law are outlined. The separate aspects of transformation of administrative law are determined. It is marked on the native updating of all system of administrative law with taking into account public interests and orientation first of all on providing of rights and freedoms of man and citizen. Changes that took place for the last decades in our country influenced all spheres of vital functions of both the state and society on the whole, not leaving legal science aside, the consequences of influence on that strike the volume and scales. For years independence of Ukraine theoretical and methodological bases of science of administrative law were radically revised taking into account political, social, economic and legal nature of the Ukrainian state, objective conformities to law and tendencies of her historical development. The new doctrine of administrative law directly influences on the process of reformation of administrative law as to the field of law, that is based on confession qualitatively of new role of the state in mutual relations with citizens, ideology is not domination, but service to them. Taking into account resulted estimation of development of science of administrative law on the modern stage determines a necessity and actuality.
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In: Oxford scholarship online
A new framework for understanding contemporary administrative law, through a comparative analysis of case law from Australia, Canada, England, Ireland, and New Zealand. The author argues that the field is structured by four values: individual self-realisation, good administration, electoral legitimacy and decisional autonomy.
In: Chapter 1 of Daly, A Culture of Justification: Vavilov and the Future of Administrative Law, 2023
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Fully revised and updated to include the latest administrative law decisions, Douglas and Jones is a leading text on administrative law. Notable for its accessibility and background material, the authorship of the 8th edition has been expanded. Roger Douglas and Professor Michael Head are joined by two other experienced administrative law educators, Yee-Fui Ng and Margaret Hyland.
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In: Public administration: an international quarterly, Band 66, Heft 1, S. 57
ISSN: 0033-3298
What does today's Administrative Law course give your students that you might not be aware of and might be helped by knowing? That, as I understand it, is the question I am to answer. But we may also want to think about the overall shape of the curriculum: it may be useful to ask about fundamental issues our students may not be aware of, that may not be dealt with elsewhere in the law school curriculum. I'll spend most of my time on the question I've been asked to address, but I hope you will accept a few sentences on this second question. For administrative lawyers, that probable gap remains the one Harold Lasswell and Myres MacDougal suggested long ago, that contemporary law studies should include explicit instruction in the skills of public policy analysis – in particular, how to evaluate the need for and probable effectiveness of regulation. Administrative Law is the hidden comparative law course of the public law and adjectival law curriculum. In my judgment, that is its main contribution to your students' appreciation for your own subjects. Its students come to grips again and again with problems whose contrasts with those of the standard court-centered curriculum can illuminate their other courses. The common thread here is in the rather pragmatic adjustments legislatures and courts have made to the exigencies of the administrative state, in the face of legal theories developed in the simpler theoretical world of one-function institutions and individual rights. Ideology and theory have rarely prevailed in competition with function and necessity. Although the situation may be changing, as we shall have to discuss, Administrative Law repeatedly confronts its students with doctrinal differences driven by "the necessity of the case," which can illuminate standard courses as well as our own. I'm going to give a few examples, proceeding in alphabetical order through the curriculum and stressing those developments that are more recent in origin.
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In: Aspen Publishers
Introduction to administrative law -- How agencies fit into our system of separated powers -- Adjudication -- Due process -- Rulemaking -- The availability of judicial review -- The scope of judicial review -- Government acquisition of private information -- Public access to government information
In: Forthcoming in Carol Harlow ed., Research Handbook on Administrative Law (Edward Elgar, Aldershot, 2021)
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In: Daedalus, Band 150, Heft 3, S. 104
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In: Emond professional series
Administrative law within Canada's Constitution and legal system -- Key principles (statutory interpretation, rules, and discretion) -- Administrative agencies, boards, and commissions -- Fairness : the right to be heard -- Fairness : impartiality and bias -- Constitutional rights in administrative law -- The standard of review in administrative law -- Advocacy before government departments, administrative agencies, and tribunals -- Tribunal practice before hearings -- Tribunal practice during hearings -- Presenting evidence at a hearing -- Administrative agency : management and control of the hearing process -- Tribunal decision-making procedures -- Remedies and enforcement in administrative agencies and tribunals -- Challenging decisions of tribunals and administrative agencies.