1st Edition

Administrative Law

Edited By Steven Cann Copyright 2002

    This title was first published in 2002. Designed to complement the first volume on administrative law which was published as part of the original series of "The International Library of Essays in Law and Legal Theory", the articles contained in this volume pick up on themes dealt with in the first, while others reflect different concerns and new developments in administrative law scholarship. It offers a representative sample of the best contemporary writing in administrative law - theoretical, empirical and doctrinal. What ties all the essays in this volume together is not that they fall within the province of administrative law, but that they are all concerned with the legal framework within which government business is conducted, and government policies are pursued, by executive action.

    I: Grounds of Judicial Review; 1: Questions of Law; 2: Sound Governance and Sound Law; 3: Judicial Review of Questions of Law and Policy; 4: The Procedural Reason for Judicial Restraint; II: Cross-currents; 5: The Limits of Judicial Review of Executive Action—Some Comparisons Between Australia and the United States; 6: American Administrative Law Under Siege: Is Germany a Model?; 7: Codification of Administrative Law: The US and the Union; 8: Judicial review and codification; III: Empirical Research; 9: Studying Administrative Law: A Methodology for, and Report on, New Empirical Research; 10: Judicial Review: Questions of Impact; 11: The Influence of Judicial Review on Bureaucratic Decision-Making; 12: The Impact of Federal Court Decisions on the Policies and Administration of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency; 13: Tribunals and Informal Justice; IV: The Economics of Public Law; 14: The Judiciary and Public Choice; 15: A Theory of Administrative Law; 16: Public Law and Private Finance—Placing the Private Finance Initiative in a Public Law Frame; 17: Accountability in the Regulatory State; 18: Private Parties, Public Functions and the New Administrative Law; V: Liability; 19: Suing the State; 20: The Rational Strength of the Private Law Model; 21: Judicial Relief and Public Tort Law; 22: Damages in Public Law

    Biography

    Steven Cann