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The Evolution of General Administrative Law and the Emergence of Postmodern Administrative LawKarl-Heinz LadeurUniversity of Hamburg - Faculty of Law March 21, 2011 Osgoode CLPE Research Paper No. 16/2011 Abstract: The discussion on the emergence of global administrative law is centered around the question: “Is it law?” and problems of accountability. This is a narrow perspective which ignores the autonomy of the administrative “internal law” generated by administrative agencies themselves. This is shown for the evolution of domestic administrative law in the 19th century and its transformations in the 20th century. Domestic administrative law is only to a much lesser extent a product of courts or legislators than hitherto taken for granted. This is why it should not come as a surprise that the instruments and forms of global administrative law are generated by transnational administrative networks of agencies. The evolution of both domestic and transnational administrative law will allow for new heterarchical forms of accountability and legitimation once the focus on a hierarchical concept of delegation is given up. The paper tries to outline a perspective on the transformation of administrative law based on domestic administrative law but at the same time intends to open a perspective on a new look at the emergent global administrative law.
Number of Pages in PDF File: 55 Keywords: accountability, global administrative law, autonomy, administrative “internal law”, Domestic administrative law, transnational administrative networks of agencies, new heterarchical forms of accountability, legitimation, delegation, transformation JEL Classification: K39 working papers seriesDate posted: March 23, 2011Suggested CitationContact Information
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