Administrative law
Legal Articles: Administrative law
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Administrative law |
| Date Added: September 21, 2007 08:32:50 PM |
Administrative law is the body of law that arises from the activities of administrative agencies of government. Government agency action can include rulemaking, adjudication, or the enforcement of a specific regulatory agenda. Administrative law is considered a branch of public law. As a body of law, administrative law deals with the decision-making of administrative units of government (e.g., tribunals, boards or commissions) that are part of a state regulatory scheme in such areas as international trade, manufacturing, the environment, taxation, broadcasting, immigration and transport. Administrative law expanded greatly during the twentieth century, as legislative bodies world-wide created more government agencies to regulate the increasingly complex social, economic and political spheres of human interaction. Administrative law in common law countries Administrative law may also apply to review of decisions of so-called quasi-public bodies, such as non-profit corporations, disciplinary boards, and other decision-making bodies that effect the legal rights of members of a particular group or entity. While administrative decision-making bodies are often controlled by larger governmental units, their decisions could be reviewed by a court of general jurisdiction under some principle of judicial review based upon due process (United States) or fundamental justice (Canada). Judicial review of administrative decision, it must be noted, is different from an appeal. When sitting in review of a decision, the Court will only look at the method in which the decision was arrived at, whereas in appeal the correctness of the decision itself will be under question. This difference is vital in appreciating administrative law in common law countries. The scope of judicial review may be limited to certain questions of fairness, or whether the administrative action is ultra vires. In terms of ultra vires actions in the broad sense, a reviewing court may set aside an administrative decision if it is patently unreasonable (under Canadian law), Wednesbury unreasonable (under British law), or arbitrary and capricious under (U.S. Administrative Procedure Act and New York State law). Administrative law, as laid down by the Supreme Court in India, has also recognized two more grounds of judicial review which were recognized but not applied by English Courts viz. legitimate expectation and proportionality. The powers to review administrative decisions are usually established by statute, but were originally developed from the royal prerogative writs of English law, such as the writ of mandamus and the writ of certiorari. In certain Common Law jurisdictions, such as India or Pakistan, the power to pass such writs is a Constitutionally guaranteed power. This power is seen as fundamental to the power of judicial review and an aspect of the independent judiciary. Administrative law in the United States The actions of executive agencies independent agencies are the main focus of American administrative law. In response to the rapid creation of new independent agencies in the early twentieth century (see discussion below), Congress enacted the Administrative Procedure Act (APA) in 1946. Many of the independent agencies operate as miniature versions of the tripartite federal government, with the authority to "legislate" (through rulemaking), "adjudicate" (through administrative hearings), and to "execute" administrative goals (through agency enforcement personnel). Because the United States Constitution sets no limits on this tripartite authority of administrative agencies, Congress enacted the APA to establish fair administrative law procedures to comply with the requirements of Constitutional due process. The dominant U.S. Supreme Court case in the field of American administrative law is Chevron U.S.A. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, 467 U.S. 837 (1984). |
Aba Journal | |||
| Jenner #1 in Am Law Pro Bono Survey | Chicago-based Jenner & Block has taken top honors this year in American Lawyer's annual pro bono survey, which was discussed in an article in the July issue. "The firm obtained a number-one ranking through a combination of having 174.8 average pro bono hours per attorney in… | ||
| ‘Profile’ Investigations By FBI Being Considered at DOJ | The Department of Justice is considering a policy change that would allow the FBI to investigate individuals within the U.S. without any basis other than that they fall within a "profile" considered to be suspicious. The change, which is being considered as part of a planned revision of investigative guidelines… |
Law.com News | |
| Change Ahead for Law School Rankings? | may change how it calculates its law school rankings -- and some deans aren't happy about it. The magazine is considering pooling part-time students' scores after hearing claims that some schools move students with lower grades and test scores into part-time programs so they can report better data, said the magazine's director of data research. Deans warn that a slot on the list is so important that some schools would drop part-time programs rather than slip in the rankings. | ||
| A Rare DOJ Mea Culpa in High Court Child Rape Case | The Justice Department has made an extraordinary statement of regret for its handling of the case of , in which the Supreme Court last month ruled that the death penalty for non-homicide child rape was unconstitutional. In a significant omission, no one told the Court in briefing the case that under a law passed by Congress in 2006, child rape was made eligible for the death penalty under the Uniform Code of Military Justice. But why is the DOJ taking responsibility? | Warning: MagpieRSS: Failed to parse RSS file. (not well-formed (invalid token) at line 54, column 114) in /home/alaworgm/public_html/magpierss/rss_fetch.inc on line 238 Warning: MagpieRSS: Failed to parse RSS file. (not well-formed (invalid token) at line 54, column 114) in /home/alaworgm/public_html/magpierss/rss_fetch.inc on line 238 Jurist |
Google law |
| Helmet-law discussion gears up as motorcycle deaths rise - Indianapolis Star |
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| CHEATS AND THIEVES NOT INVITED A new law that's as good as gold - Detroit Free Press |
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Yahoo law | |
| Spanish socialists want abortion law relaxed (AFP via Yahoo! News) | Spain's governing socialists, meeting at a congress in Madrid, said Saturday they wanted the law on abortion to be relaxed in the predominantly Catholic country. | ||
| Villages test law's merits (The Springfield News-Leader) | Welcome to Friedenswald -- population two. This 65-acre homestead overlooking the Lake of the Ozarks in Camden County is one of Missouri's newest villages, incorporated under the soon-to-be-repealed "village law," which made it possible for a single landowner to declare himself a village of one. |
Google legal news | |
| Russians prepare 'legal onslaught' in battle with BP - Telegraph.co.uk |
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| UNR outside legal fees hit $1.7M - Reno Gazette Journal |
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Yahoo legal news | |
| Legal fight over Williamson County road widening averted (The Tennessean) | Construction to widen a mile-long section of Temple Road in the Grassland community could begin this month, after Williamson County highway officials voted to end a legal fight with three property owners. | ||
| Farmers seek badger legal advice (BBC News) | Farmers are taking legal advice after the government rejected a cull of badgers in England to control TB in cattle. |
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