ISBN:
9783642202643
Language:
English
Pages:
Online-Ressource (XIII, 409p, digital)
Series Statement:
SpringerLink
Series Statement:
Bücher
Parallel Title:
Buchausg. u.d.T. Global administrative law and EU administrative law
Keywords:
Comparative law
;
Public law
;
Administrative law
;
Law
;
Law
;
Comparative law
;
Public law
;
Administrative law
;
Aufsatzsammlung
;
Europäische Union
;
Internationales Verwaltungsrecht
;
Europäische Union
;
Verwaltungsrecht
;
Völkerrecht
;
Europäische Union
;
Internationales Verwaltungsrecht
Abstract:
This book seeks to enrich and refine global administrative law and EU administrative law analytical tools by examining their manifold relations. Its aim is to begin to explore the complex reality of the interactions between EU administrative law and global administrative law, to provide a preliminary map of such legal and institutional reality, and to review it. The book is the first attempt to analyze a dense area of new legal issues. The first part of the book contains core elements of a general theory of the relationships between global and EU administrative law: comparative inquiries, exchanges of legal principles, and developing linkages. The second part is devoted to special regulatory regimes, in which global and European law coexist, though not always peacefully. Several sectors are considered: cultural heritage, medicines, climate change, antitrust, accounting and auditing, banking supervision, and public procurement.
Description / Table of Contents:
Global Administrative Law and EU Administrative Law; Contents; List of Abbreviations; Chapter 1: Introduction: The Relationships Between Global Administrative Law and EU Administrative Law; Part I Comparative Inquiries; Chapter 2: EU and Global Administrative Organizations; 2.1 Introduction; 2.2 The Position of the EU and Global Administrations in the Institutional System; 2.3 Organizational Models; 2.3.1 Supranational or A-National?; 2.3.2 Composite Bodies; 2.3.3 Independence from Political Institutions; 2.4 The Role of Private Actors in EU and Global Administrative Organizations
Description / Table of Contents:
2.5 ConclusionsReferences; Chapter 3: EU and Global Judicial Systems; 3.1 Introduction; 3.2 The Multiple Functions of the EU Judicial System; 3.3 The Judicial Systems of the WTO and of the Convention on the Law of the Sea; 3.4 The Mercosur System and the World Bank Inspection Panel; 3.5 Some Comparative Reflections; References; Chapter 4: The Influence of European and Global Administrative Law on National Administrative Acts; 4.1 Introduction; 4.2 The Scope of Influence; 4.2.1 The Legal Basis; 4.2.2 The Procedure; 4.2.3 The Decision; 4.2.4 The Legal Effects; 4.2.5 The Material Execution
Description / Table of Contents:
4.2.6 The Judicial Review4.3 The Techniques of Influence; 4.3.1 The Higher Law; 4.3.2 The Binding Law; 4.3.3 The Higher Law Enforcing Binding Law; 4.3.4 The Bargained Law; 4.3.5 The Stronger Law; 4.3.6 The Absence of Law; 4.4 The Problems of Influence; 4.4.1 The Concept of Administrative Act; 4.4.2 The Rule of Law; 4.4.3 Administrative Acts and Democracy; References; Part II Exchanges of Legal Principles; Chapter 5: The Genesis and Structure of General Principles of Global Public Law; 5.1 Principles of Law in the Global Legal Space
Description / Table of Contents:
5.2 The Distinctive Features of General Principles of Global Public Law5.3 The Genesis of General Principles: Sources and Origin; 5.4 Recognition or Creation of Principles?; 5.5 The Structure of General Principles; 5.6 The Achievement of Procedural Due Process of Law; 5.7 Public Law Within and Beyond the State: From Separateness to Specialization; References; Chapter 6: Administrative Law Beyond the State: Participation at the Intersection of Legal Systems; 6.1 Intersections: The Reception of International Law by EU Law; 6.2 Multiple Facets of Participation
Description / Table of Contents:
6.3 Hindrances to Participation at the International-EU Intersection6.4 Selected Interactions; 6.4.1 Food Standards: Codex Alimentarius; 6.4.2 Persistent Organic Pollutants: The Stockholm Convention; 6.4.3 Pharmaceuticals: Harmonization of Technical Requirements for Registration; 6.5 Trumping Participation?; References; Chapter 7: EU Law, Global Law and the Right to Good Administration; 7.1 A New Paradigm of Administrative Law: Good Administration and Quality Administration; 7.2 The Role of Courts in US Administrative Law
Description / Table of Contents:
7.3 The Council of Europe´s Recommendation on Good Administration and the European Court of Human Rights
Note:
Includes bibliographical references
DOI:
10.1007/978-3-642-20264-3
URL:
Volltext
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