OUP is publishing an edited
collection on European administrative law systems between 1890 and 1910.
ABOUT THE BOOK
The second volume in this series
explores the evolution of administrative laws in Europe to better understand
the foundations of EU institutions, focusing on the period of 1890-1910. These
years saw both a growth of governments and either the entry into force or the
consolidation of mechanisms of control on public authorities. Comparing the
Austro-Hungarian Empire, Belgium, France, the German Empire, Italy, and the
United Kingdom, this title focuses on their historical administrative actions
and looks at their development during that time.
The volume contains three
sections. The first introduces the project and the topic. The second covers the
six legal systems chosen for this study, looking at the historical context. The
third takes a comparative approach across the six systems, following on from
their histories to look at their development and legacies. This edited
collection expands on the ideals of a common core within European
administrative law and how they have shaped our world.
This volume is an essential tool
for anyone involved in administrative and constitutional law and legal history.
ABOUT THE EDITORS
Giacinto della Cananea is a
professor and leading authority on EU administrative law and comparative
administrative law. His publications include five monographs, 20 edited
volumes, and over 150 articles, book chapters, and comments to judicial
decisions on national and EU administrative law, global administrative law, and
public finances. He is a co-ordinator of ReNEUAL, and a member of the European
Group of Public Law, the European Constitutional Law Network, the Societas
Juris Public Europei, and the Dornburg Group of Administrative Law.
Stefano Mannoni is full professor of legal history at the University of
Florence. He has published mainly on history of public law, notably history of
state and centralization building in France and history of public international
law. He served from 2005 to 2012 as a regulator of the Italian audio-visual and
telecommunications industry and since then he has written extensively on the
topic of law and technology. In 2013, he was appointed a member of the
commission for the reform of the Italian constitution.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Introduction
1. Commonality and Diversity in Administrative Justice: Fin de siècle, Giacinto
della Cananea
The Legal Systems Selected for Comparative Analysis
2. Standards of Judicial Review of Administrative Action in the
Austro-Hungarian Empire, Angela Ferrari Zumbini
3. The Administration and the Judge: Pragmatism in Belgian Case Law, Yseult
Marique
4. The Judicial Elaboration of Standards for Public Administrations in
France, Jérémy Mercier
5. Standards of Judicial Review of Administrative Action in the German
Empire, Lilly Weidemann
6. Initial Investigation on Excess of Power: Judicial Review of Administrative
Action in Italy, Alessandra Bassani
7. The Historical Foundations of Judicial Review in the United Kingdom, Conor McCormick
Comparative Studies
8. Liberal Democracies and the Control of Virtue: The Weakening of
Representative Regimes and the Expansion of the Judiciary, Leopoldo A
Moscoso
9. Judicial Review of Administrative Action: A Brief Comparison between the
Austro-Hungarian and German Empires, Luca De Lucia
10. The Development of Administrative Law in the United Kingdom, Robert
Thomas
11. The Formation of the Italian Administrative Justice System, European Common
Principles of Administrative Law, and 'Jurisdictionalisation' of Administrative
Justice in the 19th Century, Marco Mazzamuto
12. The Administrative World of Yesterday, Stefano Mannoni
More info here
No comments:
Post a Comment