Principles of Australian Administrative Law. W. Friedmann, LL.B. [Melbourne University Press. 12s. 6d.]
In: The international & comparative law quarterly: ICLQ, Band 1, Heft 2, S. 287-288
ISSN: 1471-6895
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In: The international & comparative law quarterly: ICLQ, Band 1, Heft 2, S. 287-288
ISSN: 1471-6895
It means that the principle of coordination of private and public interests is not isolated (independent), in some cases it has to be based upon general principles of law. It is stated that the consolidation of the balance of interests in the laws may change with regard to peculiarities of economic development of the state.
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It means that the principle of coordination of private and public interests is not isolated (independent), in some cases it has to be based upon general principles of law. It is stated that the consolidation of the balance of interests in the laws may change with regard to peculiarities of economic development of the state.
BASE
It means that the principle of coordination of private and public interests is not isolated (independent), in some cases it has to be based upon general principles of law. It is stated that the consolidation of the balance of interests in the laws may change with regard to peculiarities of economic development of the state.
BASE
It means that the principle of coordination of private and public interests is not isolated (independent), in some cases it has to be based upon general principles of law. It is stated that the consolidation of the balance of interests in the laws may change with regard to peculiarities of economic development of the state.
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In: International review of administrative sciences: an international journal of comparative public administration, Band 25, Heft 1, S. i-iii
ISSN: 1461-7226
In: Administrative law and regulatory policy / Stephen G. Breyer Suppl. 2007-2008
"Serial no. 21." ; Shipping list no.: 97-0372-P. ; Distributed to some depository libraries in microfiche. ; Includes bibliographical references. ; Mode of access: Internet.
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"Serial no. 40." ; Shipping list no.: 2000-0285-P. ; Distributed to some depository libraries in microfiche. ; Includes bibliographical references. ; Mode of access: Internet.
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In: University of Cambridge Faculty of Law Research Paper No. 50/2016
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Working paper
In: Wisconsin Law Review, Band 2010
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International audience ; Imprescriptibility is a legal technique that allows lawyers to place certain things above the human condition.Through imprescriptibility, the law expresses the conviction that certain attributes, goods or actions are the work of something other than men or, at the very least, that they escape them. The slow and constant decline in the imprescriptibility of administrative law teaches that this technique does not mean timelessness. The study, therefore, explores the evolution of the different manifestations of imprescriptibility in administrative law. Because imprescriptibility is supposed to cover the most precious, the temporality of this technique betrays the inescapable change in the values underlying administrative law. The imprescriptibility of competences appears to be a latent rule, whereas there are no political or theoretical obstacles to its recognition today. There seems to be a structural incompatibility between the power to make administrative acts and extinctive prescription. Prolonged inaction can never be served as a renunciation here, because competence is not a possession of which the public body is the master. Paradoxically, in order not to degrade them, not to reduce them to objects of property, the imprescriptibility of competences remains unspoken. If on the contrary, the imprescriptibility of the public domain benefits from a solid foundation in positive law, its history is otherwise troubled. The apparitions and disappearances of the principle over time will have a lasting impact on the doctrine, instilling the conviction that imprescriptibility forms an extrinsic, contingent characteristic, and therefore difficult to justify in theory. In the 19th century, the thesis of "non-commercial goods" flourished, the ones that « Providence divided to everyone indiscriminately, such as air, light and water ». The idea of imprescriptibility by nature of the public domain offers a translation of the divine origin of these goods. The doctrine of imprescriptibility for the sole ...
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In: Forthcoming in "Judicial Globalization and Global Administrative Law: The Proliferation of International Courts" in Sabino Cassese (ed.), Global Administrative Law Handbook (Edward Elgar 2015/16)
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Working paper
The authors of the article explore the multi-functionality of administrative law. Administrative legislation should take into account social realities, recognize the usefulness of social order (when assessing the need for legislative changes or their stability) and transfer them to the level of justice (in terms of the adequacy of legal regulation). After the restoration of independence, administrative law in Latvia and Lithuania had to undergo a transformation of values, abandon the imposed Soviet ideological standards and master new standards of democracies. This strengthened social and legal values, enshrined and protected in the Constitutions of both countries and after accession to the EU, in accordance with the provisions of public administration, allowed by the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union.The article notes that the formation of legislative policy and the creation of legislation usually based on the discretion of the culture of politicians. The authors of the article draw attention to the synergistic knowledge of social reality and the use of this knowledge when building administrative and legal regulation to the level of macro-social regulation.
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