1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910688584303321

Titolo

The principle of effective legal protection in administrative law : a European comparison / / edited by Zoltán Szente, Konrad Lachmayer

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Abingdon, Oxon : , : Taylor & Francis, , 2017

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (xv, 399 pages)

Disciplina

342

Soggetti

Abuse of administrative power

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Nota di contenuto

Introduction - Zoltán Szente and Konrad Lachmayer -- I. Conceptual Basis and International Background -- Chapter 1: Conceptualising the Principle of Effective Legal Protection in Administrative Law -- Zoltán SzenteChapter -- 2: Effective Legal Protection in the European Legal Order Christoph Görisch -- Chapter 3: Creating a European-wide Standard of Effective Legal Protection: The European Convention on Human Rights Marten Breuer -- Chapter 4: Effective Legal Protection in International Law Stephan Wittich -- II. The Principle of Effective Legal Protection in National Administrative Jurisdictions -- Chapter 5: The Principle of Effective Legal Protection in Austrian Administrative Law Ulrike Giera, Konrad Lachmayer -- Chapter 6: The Principle of Effective Legal Protection in Danish Administrative Law Søren Højgaard Mørup -- Chapter 7: The Effective Legal Protection in French Administrative Law Sylvia Calmes-Brunet -- Chapter 8: The Principle of Effective Legal Protection in German Administrative Law Diana Princess of Hohenlohe-Oehringen -- Chapter 9: The Principle of Effective Legal Protection in Hungarian administrative law Fruzsina Gárdos-Orosz and István Temesi -- Chapter 10: The Principle of Effective Legal Protection in Italian Administrative Law Fulvio Cortese -- Chapter 11: The Principle of Effective Legal Protection in Administrative Law in Lithuania Jurgita Paužaitė-Kulvinskienė -- Chapter 12: Dilemmas and Challenges of Legal Protection against Administrative Actions in the Republic Macedonia Gordana Siljanovska-Davkova and Renata Treneska-Deskoska -- Chapter 13: The principle of effective legal protection in



administrative law: the Netherlands Karianne Albers, Lise Kjellevold and Raymond Schlössels -- Chapter 14: The Principle of Effective Legal Protection in Polish Administrative Law Joanna Lemańska -- Chapter 15: Effective Legal Protection in Administrative Law in SloveniaErik Kerševan -- Chapter 16: The Principle of Effective Legal Protection in Spanish Administrative LawAngel Manuel Moreno -- Chapter 17: The Principle of Effective Legal Protection in the Swiss Administrative Law Felix Uhlmann -- Chapter 18: The Principle of Effective Legal Protection in Administrative Law in the United Kingdom Robert Thomas -- III. Comparative Studies -- Chapter 19: The Principle of Effective Legal Protection in International and European Law -Comparative ReportKonrad Lachmayer -- Chapter 20: The Principle of Effective Legal Protection in Administrative Law - A Comparison Zoltán Szente.

Sommario/riassunto

This collection presents a comparative analysis of the principle of effective legal protection in administrative law in Europe. It examines how European states consider and enforce the related requirements in their domestic administrative law. The book is divided into three parts: the first comprises a theoretical introductory chapter along with perspectives from International and European Law; part two presents 15 individual country reports on the principle of effective legal protection in mostly EU member states. The core function of the reports is to provide an analysis of the domestic instruments and procedures. Adopting a contextual approach, they consider the historical, political and legal circumstances as well as analysing the relevant case law of the domestic courts; the third part provides a comparative analysis of the country reports. The final chapter assesses the influence and relevance of EU law and the ECHR. The book thus identifies the most important trends and makes a valuable contribution to the debate around convergence and divergence in European national administrative systems.